Neuronal activities of the anterior part of the inferior parietal lobule (area 7b or PF) were investigated in five awake Japanese monkeys. There were neurons which had specific combinations of receptive field (RF) locations, most typically in both the face and hand; we refer to the seas Face-Hand neurons. The most interesting property of the Face-Hand neurons is that some of these neurons responded to specific behavior executed with synergism between the face (especially the mouth) and hand movements; namely, face-hand coordinated behavior (e.g., eating behavior). We call these cells Face-Hand coordination neurons (52% of all the Face-Hand neurons). These neurons discharged more strongly when the animal executed face-hand coordinated behavior, especially eating behavior, than when somatosensory stimuli were given to RFs passively, or when face movements and hand movements were executed separately. We thus propose that the neuronal activities of area 7b are related to the representation of face-hand coordination.
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Neuroimage
August 2005
Department of Human Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QX, UK.
Pain perception is a multidimensional phenomenon, derived from sensory, affective, cognitive-evaluative and homeostatic information. Neuroimaging studies of pain perception have investigated the role of primary somatosensory cortex (SI); however, they have typically failed to demonstrate the expected somatotopy. An alternative network for the sensory component of pain has been proposed, involving a temperature and pain-specific nucleus of the thalamus (VMpo) and its projections to dorsal posterior insula (dpIns).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSomatosens Mot Res
December 2003
Section of Cognitive Neurobiology, Department of Maxillofacial Biology, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo 113-8549, Japan.
Neuronal activities of the anterior part of the inferior parietal lobule (area 7b or PF) were investigated in five awake Japanese monkeys. There were neurons which had specific combinations of receptive field (RF) locations, most typically in both the face and hand; we refer to the seas Face-Hand neurons. The most interesting property of the Face-Hand neurons is that some of these neurons responded to specific behavior executed with synergism between the face (especially the mouth) and hand movements; namely, face-hand coordinated behavior (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Comp Neurol
February 2000
Center for Neuroscience and Department of Psychology, University of California, Davis, 95616, USA.
The human somatosensory cortex in the Sylvian fissure was examined using functional magnetic resonance imaging to describe the number and internal organization of cortical fields present. Somatic stimuli were applied to the lips, face, hand, trunk, and foot of 18 human subjects. Activity patterns were transposed onto three-dimensional magnetic resonance images of the brain so that the location of activity associated with the different stimuli could be related to specific regions of the cortex.
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