Encoding of visual targets during 3D reaching movements in human and non-human primates

Piserchia, Valentina (2018) Encoding of visual targets during 3D reaching movements in human and non-human primates, [Dissertation thesis], Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna. Dottorato di ricerca in Joint international ph.D programme in cognitive neuroscience, 30 Ciclo. DOI 10.6092/unibo/amsdottorato/8407.
Documenti full-text disponibili:
[img]
Anteprima
Documento PDF (English) - Richiede un lettore di PDF come Xpdf o Adobe Acrobat Reader
Disponibile con Licenza: Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives 3.0 (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) .
Download (2MB) | Anteprima

Abstract

The aim of my thesis was to investigate how reaching for visual targets placed in 3D space influences the coordinate frames and the kinematics in non-human and human primates. To this end, I conducted three studies. The first study was conducted on non-human primates to find the predominant reference frame of cells in a specific reach related area of the PPC (area PEc) while reaching towards targets placed at different depths and directions; we tested whether PEc reaching cells displayed hand- and/or body-centered coding of reach targets. We found that the majority of PEc neurons encoded targets in a mixed body/hand-centered reference frame. Our findings highlight a role for area PEc as intermediate node between the visually dominated area V6A and the somatosensory dominated area PE. The second study was conducted on healthy human subjects to find the reference frame used while reaching towards targets placed at different depths and directions. Our results revealed reach error patterns based on both eye- and space-centered coordinate systems: in depth more biased towards a space-centered representation and in direction mixed between space- and eye-centered representation. The third study was conducted on a patient with a parietal cortex lesion who showed optic ataxia symptoms. Optic ataxia patients show deficits in visuo-manual guidance especially when reaching to targets located in the periphery of the visual field. By manipulating gaze position and hand position of visual reaching targets, placed at different depth and directions, we investigated how reaching in peripheral and central viewing conditions influenced the trajectories and reach errors of the patient and controls. Our results suggest that the reaching inaccuracies observed, in particular in the configurations where the direction of gaze and reach differed, are due to a disruption of the online correction mechanism and that the PPC is involved in these automatic corrections.

Abstract
Tipologia del documento
Tesi di dottorato
Autore
Piserchia, Valentina
Supervisore
Dottorato di ricerca
Ciclo
30
Coordinatore
Settore disciplinare
Settore concorsuale
Parole chiave
depth, hand, reach coordinates, spatial coordinates, visuomotor transformations, pointing movements, reference frames, motor behavior, kinematics
URN:NBN
DOI
10.6092/unibo/amsdottorato/8407
Data di discussione
10 Maggio 2018
URI

Altri metadati

Statistica sui download

Gestione del documento: Visualizza la tesi

^