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Importance of the Primary Motor Cortex in Development of Human Hand/Finger Dexterity
Author(s) -
Eiichi Naito,
Tomoyo Morita,
Minoru Asada
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cerebral cortex communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2632-7376
DOI - 10.1093/texcom/tgaa085
Subject(s) - primary motor cortex , proprioception , functional magnetic resonance imaging , psychology , physical medicine and rehabilitation , motor cortex , brain activity and meditation , task (project management) , transcranial magnetic stimulation , motor area , motor control , neuroscience , finger tapping , audiology , medicine , electroencephalography , stimulation , management , economics
Hand/finger dexterity is well-developed in humans, and the primary motor cortex (M1) is believed to play a particularly important role in it. Here, we show that efficient recruitment of the contralateral M1 and neuronal inhibition of the ipsilateral M1 identified by simple hand motor and proprioceptive tasks are related to hand/finger dexterity and its ontogenetic development. We recruited healthy, right-handed children ( n  = 21, aged 8–11 years) and adults ( n  = 23, aged 20–26 years) and measured their brain activity using functional magnetic resonance imaging during active and passive right-hand extension–flexion tasks. We calculated individual active control-related activity (active–passive) to evaluate efficient brain activity recruitment and individual task-related deactivation (neuronal inhibition) during both tasks. Outside the scanner, participants performed 2 right-hand dexterous motor tasks, and we calculated the hand/finger dexterity index (HDI) based on their individual performance. Participants with a higher HDI exhibited less active control-related activity in the contralateral M1 defined by the active and passive tasks, independent of age. Only children with a higher HDI exhibited greater ipsilateral M1 deactivation identified by these tasks. The results imply that hand/finger dexterity can be predicted by recruitment and inhibition styles of the M1 during simple hand sensory–motor tasks.

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