Cortical Representation of Bimanual Movements

Uri Rokni, Orna Steinberg, Eilon Vaadia, Haim Sompolinsky*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

62 Scopus citations

Abstract

It is well established that the discharge of neurons in primate motor cortex is tuned to the movement direction of the contralateral arm. Interestingly, it has been found that these neurons exhibit a directional tuning to the ipsilateral arm as well and that the preferred directions to both arms tend to be similar. A recent study showed that motor cortex cells are also directionally selective to bimanual movements, but the relationship between the bimanual and unimanual representations remains unclear. To address this issue, we analyzed the responses of motor cortical neurons recorded from two macaque monkeys during unimanual and bimanual reaching movements. We decomposed the bimanual movement representation into contralateral and ipsilateral directionally tuned components. Our major finding is that the movement of the contralateral arm modifies the tuning of the cells to the ipsilateral arm such that: (1) the offset and modulation depth of the tuning are suppressed; and (2) the preferred directions are randomly shifted. Both these effects eliminate the correlation between the contralateral and ipsilateral representations during bimanual movements. We suggest that the modification of the ipsilateral arm representation is caused by the recruitment of local inhibition that conveys callosal inputs during bimanual movements. This hypothesis is supported by the analysis of a model of two motor cortical networks, coupled with sparse random interhemispheric projections that reproduce the main features observed in the data. Finally, we show that the modification of the ipsilateral arm representation reduces the interference between the movements of both arms.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)11577-11586
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Neuroscience
Volume23
Issue number37
DOIs
StatePublished - 17 Dec 2003

Keywords

  • Bimanual
  • Directional tuning
  • Inhibition
  • Motor cortex
  • Movement representation
  • Network model

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