학술논문

The Influence of Paced Sound on Activation of Cerebellum in a Finger Opposition Task: a fMRI Study / 手指対立運動に関するリズム音の影響
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
理学療法科学 / Rigakuryoho Kagaku. 2005, 20(1):1
Subject
cerebellum
feed-forward
finger-to-thumb opposition movements
フィードフォワード
小脳
手指対立運動
Language
Japanese
ISSN
1341-1667
2434-2807
Abstract
In the field of rehabilitation of patients with Parkinson's disease, external cues (visual or auditory information) are important in execution of activities of daily living, which is called "paradoxical movement". However, the neural mechanism of paradoxical movement is unclear. In order to clarify the influence of external cues (paced sound) on the activation of the cerebellum, we scanned 9 right-handed healthy subjects by functional MRI while they performed (1) self-initiated finger-to-thumb opposition movements once every second, and (2) the same movements externally triggered by a metronome's sound. During self-initiated movements with the right hand, the cerebellum was activated in all subjects. During externally triggered movements, the activation was decreased in 7 of 9 subjects, and vanished in 1 of 9 subjects. During self-initiated movements with the left hand, the cerebellum was activated in 8 of 9 subjects. During externally triggered movements, the activation was decreased in 6 of 8 and vanished in 1 of 8 subjects. These results suggest the cerebellum's role is feed-forward control during self-initiated movements, but external cues take the place of feed-forward control during externally triggered movemesinnnts.