Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T05:18:21.215Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The crossroads of anticipatory attention and motor preparation. I

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2015

Summary

This series of papers suggests that processes underlying anticipatory attention and motor preparation share a common control mechanism. Both functions are of utmost importance for an optimal adaptation to our environment. While the posterior part of the cortex is aimed at the analysis of incoming information, both from the outer world and our own body, the anterior part is involved in action and reaction. If we know when in the near future we will be confronted with relevant information, and how this has to be responded upon, modality specific sensoric and motoric information channels have to be open in order to guarantee an adequate response. The anterior and posterior parts of the cortex are activated from the thalamus and the information transmission is influenced via the reticular nucleus (RN) of the thalamus. The RN itself is under a double control: excitatory from the prefrontal cortex and inhibitory from the neostriatum. It is suggested that selection in anticipatory attention and motor preparation is realized in a comparable way via the RN. In Part I the relevant anatomical structures are described. In Part II the model for anticipatory attention and motor preparation is presented. In Part III the supporting neuropsychological evidence is presented, after which psychophysiological experiments will be discussed having lead to the formulation of the model.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Scandinavian College of Neuropsychopharmacology 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Literatuur

1.Allport, A. Visual attention. In: Posner, MI, red. Foundations of cognitive Science. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1989: 631–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2.Mesulam, MM. Principles of behavioral Neurology. Philadelphia: F.A. Davis, 1985.Google Scholar
3.Broadbent, DE. Stimulus set and response set: two kinds of selective attention. In: Mostofsky, DI, red. Attention: contemporary Theory and Analysis. New York: Appleton Century Crofts, 1970: 5160.Google Scholar
4.Skinner, JE, Yingling, CD. Central gating mechanisms that regulate event-related potentials and behavior. In: Desmedt, JE, red. Attention, voluntary Contraction and slow Potential Shifts. Basel: Karger, 1977: 3069.Google Scholar
5.Scheibel, ME, Scheibel, AB. The organisation of the nucleus reticularis thalami: a Golgi study. Brain Res 1966; 1: 4362.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6.Massion, J. The thalamus in the motor system. Appl Neurophysiol 1967; 39: 222–38.Google Scholar
7.Kelly, JP. The neural basis of perception and movement. In: Kandel, ER, Schwartz, JH, Jessell, TM, red. Principles of neural Science, New-York: Elsevier, 1991: 283–95.Google Scholar
8.Mitrofanis, J, Guillery, R. New views of the thalamic reticular nucleus in the adult and developing brain. TINS 1993; 16: 414–7.Google ScholarPubMed
9.Luria, AR. The working brain. London: Allen Lane Pinguin Press, 1973.Google Scholar
10.Hyvarinen, J, Poranan, A. Function of the parietal associative area 7 as revealed from cellular discharges in alert monkey. Brain 1974; 97: 673–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
11.Mountcastle, VB, Lynch, JC, Georgopoulos, A, et al.Posterior parietal association cortex of the monkey: command functions for operations within extra-personal space. J Neurophysiol 1975; 38: 871908.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
12.Mesulam, MM. A cortical network for directed attention and unilateral neglect. Ann Neurol 1981; 10: 309–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
13.Mesulam, MM. The functional anatomy and hemispheric specialization for directed attention. The role of the parietal lobe and its connectivity. TINS 1983; 384–7.Google Scholar
14.Heilman, KM, Watson, RT, Valenstein, E. Neglect and related disorders. In: Heilman, KM, Valenstein, E, red. Clinical Neuropsychology. New York, London: Oxf Univ Press, 1993: 279336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
15.Goldberg, G. Supplementary motor area structure and function: Review and hypotheses. Behav Brain Sci 1985; 8: 567616.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
16.Brunia, CHM. Movement and stimulus preceding negativity. Biol Psychol 1988; 26: 165–78.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
17.Rothwell, J. The Control of human voluntary Movement. London: Chapman & Hall, 1994.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
18.Schell, GP, Strick, P. The origin of thalamic inputs to the arcuate premotor and supplementary motor areas. J Neurosci 1984; 4: 539–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
19.Wise, SP, Strick, P. Anatomical and physiological organization of the non-primary motor cortex. In: Evarts, EV, Wise, SP, Bousfield, D, red. The motor System in Neurobiology. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1985: 315–24.Google Scholar
20.DeLong, MR, Georgopoulos, AP, Crutcher, MD. Cortico-basal ganglia relations and coding of motor performance. In: Massion, J, Paillard, J, Schultz, W, Wiesendanger, M, red. Neural Coding of motor Performance. Exp Brain Res (Suppl. 7) 1983: 3040.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
21.Alexander, GE, DeLong, MR, Strick, PL. Parallel organization of functionally segregated circuits linking basal ganglia and cortex. Ann Rev Neurosci 1986; 9: 357–81.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
22.Alexander, GE, Crutcher, MD. Functional architecture of basal ganglia circuits: neural substrates of parallel processing. TINS 1990; 13: 266–71.Google ScholarPubMed
23.Goldman-Rakic, PS. Motor control function of the prefrontal cortex. In: Motor Areas of the Cerebral Cortex. Ciba Foundation Symposium 132. Chichester: Wiley, 1987: 187–97.Google Scholar
24.Passingham, RE. The frontal Lobes and voluntary Action. Oxford: Oxf Univ Press, 1983.Google Scholar
25.Brooks, VB. The neural Basis of motor Control, New York, Oxford: Oxf Univ Press, 1986.Google Scholar
26.Mishkin, M, Ungerleider, LG, Macko, KA. Object vision and spatial vision: two cortical pathways. TINS 1983; 6: 414–7.Google Scholar
27.Keele, SW. Movement control in skilled motor performance. Psychol Bull 1968; 36: 742–6.Google Scholar
28.Marsden, CD. Which motor disorder in Parkinson's desease indicates the true motor function of the basal ganglia? In: Functions of the basal Ganglia, Ciba symposium 107. London: Pitman, 1984: 225–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
29.Marsden, CD. The enigma of the basal ganglia and movement. In: Evarts, EV, Wise, SP, Bousfield, D, red. The motor System in Neurobiology. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1985: 292304.Google Scholar