Neurodevelopmental motor disorders

Author(s):  
Davide Martino ◽  
Antonella Macerollo

Neurodevelopmental motor disorders are a group of conditions characterized by developmental deficits in learning, control, and execution of motor skills. The pathophysiology of these cognitive–motor dysfunctions involves complex neuronal processes of sensorimotor integration (that is, somatosensory, proprioceptive, visual, and vestibular), as well as motor control pathways (that is, cortico-basal ganglia, cerebello-thalamo-cortical, and intracortical networks). The most common neurodevelopmental motor disorders are tic disorders (including Tourette’s syndrome), stereotypic motor disorder, and developmental co-ordination disorder. Here, the chapter provides a useful clinical guide regarding the phenomenology, pathogenesis, and management of these conditions.

2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 405-413
Author(s):  
Jilong Shi ◽  
Jun Wang ◽  
Jian Lang ◽  
Zhuo Zhang ◽  
Yan Bi ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Shaun Gallagher

This chapter examines the concept of free will as it is discussed in philosophy and neuroscience. It reviews reflective and perceptual theories of agency and argues against neuro-centric conclusions about the illusory nature of free will. Experiments conducted by Benjamin Libet suggest that neural activations prior to conscious awareness predict specific actions. This has been taken as evidence that challenges the traditional notion of free will. Libet’s experiments, arguably, are about motor control processes on an elementary timescale and say nothing about freely willed intentional actions embedded in personal and social contexts that involve longer-term, narrative timescales. One implication of this interpretation is that enactivism is not a form of simple behaviorism. Agency is not a thing reducible to elementary neuronal processes; nor is it an idea or a pure consciousness. It rather involves a structure of complex relations.


Neurology ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 950-950 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. S. Singer ◽  
A. L. Reiss ◽  
J. E. Brown ◽  
E. H. Aylward ◽  
B. Shih ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 80 (4) ◽  
pp. 2162-2176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert S. Turner ◽  
Scott T. Grafton ◽  
John R. Votaw ◽  
Mahlon R. Delong ◽  
John M. Hoffman

Turner, Robert S., Scott T. Grafton, John R. Votaw, Mahlon R. DeLong, and John M. Hoffman. Motor subcircuits mediating the control of movement velocity: a PET study. J. Neurophysiol. 80: 2162–2176, 1998. The influence of changes in the mean velocity of movement on regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was studied using positron emission tomography (PET) in nine healthy right-handed adults while they performed a smooth pursuit visuomanual tracking task. Images of relative rCBF were obtained while subjects moved a hand-held joystick to track the movement of a target at three different rates of a sinusoidal displacement (0.1, 0.4, and 0.7 Hz). Significant changes in rCBF between task conditions were detected using analysis of variance and weighted linear contrasts. The kinematics of arm and eye movements indicated that subjects performed tasks in a similar manner, particularly during the faster two tracking conditions. Significant increases in rCBF during arm movement (relative to an eye tracking only control condition) were detected in a widespread network of areas known for their involvement in motor control. The activated areas included primary sensorimotor (M1S1), dorsal and mesial premotor, and dorsal parietal cortices in the left hemisphere and to a lesser extent the sensorimotor and superior parietal cortices in the right hemisphere. Subcortically, activations were found in the left putamen, globus pallidus (GP), and thalamus, in the right basal ganglia, and in the right anterior cerebellum. Within the cerebral volume activated with movement, three areas had changes in rCBF that correlated positively with the rate of movement: left M1S1, left GP, and right anterior cerebellum. No movement-related sites had rCBF that correlated negatively with the rate of movement. Regressions of mean percent change (MPC) in rCBF onto mean hand velocity yielded two nonoverlapping subpopulations of movement-related loci, the three sites with significant rate effects and regression slopes steeper than 0.17 MPC⋅cm−1⋅s−1 and all other sites with nonsignificant rate effects and regression slopes below 0.1 MPC⋅cm−1⋅s−1. Moreover, the effects of movement per se and of movement velocity varied in magnitude independently. These results confirm previous reports that movement-related activations of M1S1 and cerebellum are sensitive to movement frequency or some covarying parameter of movement. The activation of GP with increasing movement velocity, not described in previous functional-imaging studies, supports the hypothesis that the basal ganglia motor circuit may be involved preferentially in controlling or monitoring the scale and/or dynamics of arm movements. The remaining areas that were activated equally for all movement rates may be involved in controlling higher level aspects of motor control that are independent of movement dynamics.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison Duffy ◽  
Kenneth W Latimer ◽  
Jesse H. Goldberg ◽  
Adrienne L. Fairhall ◽  
Vikram Gadagkar

Many motor skills are learned by comparing ongoing behavior to internal performance benchmarks. Dopamine neurons encode performance error in behavioral paradigms where error is externally induced, but it remains unknown if dopamine also signals the quality of natural performance fluctuations. Here we recorded dopamine neurons in singing birds and examined how spontaneous dopamine spiking activity correlated with natural fluctuations in ongoing song. Antidromically identified basal ganglia-projecting dopamine neurons correlated with recent, and not future, song variations, consistent with a role in evaluation, not production. Furthermore, dopamine spiking was suppressed following the production of outlying vocal variations, consistent with a role for active song maintenance. These data show for the first time that spontaneous dopamine spiking can evaluate natural behavioral fluctuations unperturbed by experimental events such as cues or rewards.


2011 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 777-791 ◽  
Author(s):  
Massimo Pierucci ◽  
Salvatore Galati ◽  
Mario Valentino ◽  
Vincenzo Di Matteo ◽  
Arcangelo Benigno ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marwan A. Jabri ◽  
Jerry Huang ◽  
Olivier J. D. Coenen ◽  
Terrence J. Sejnowski

1983 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 411-421 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. I. Laszlo ◽  
P. J. Bairstow

This paper reviews studies which demonstrate the importance of kinaesthesis in the acquisition and performance of motor skills. A method of measuring kinaesthetic sensitivity in children and adults (recently developed) is briefly described. Developmental trends in kinaesthetic perception are discussed and large individual differences found within age groups. It was shown that kinaesthetically undeveloped children can be trained to perceive and memorize kinaesthetic information with greatly improved accuracy. Furthermore perceptual training facilitates the performance of a drawing skill. On the basis of these results an argument is made for the importance of kinaesthesis in skilled motor behaviour.


2015 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. JEN.S25095 ◽  
Author(s):  
Navkiran Kalsi ◽  
Renata Tambelli ◽  
Paola Aceto ◽  
Carlo Lai

Tourette syndrome (TS) is a neurodevelopmental motor disorder described as an inability to inhibit unwanted motor movements. This article reviews research on the execution and inhibition of voluntary motor movements in TS. Over last two decades, a number of studies have addressed the structural and functional deficits associated with this syndrome. Only a limited number of studies have assessed the motor skills in these patients but have failed to reach any conclusive outcome. In the domain of response inhibition also, studies have reported arguable impairments in these patients. It is suggested that these conflicting results can be attributed to co-occurring comorbid conditions, the constraints posed by variable age groups, lack of control measures, and lack of specificity of domains addressed. This review will describe a way in which future research can be directed to increase our knowledge of this otherwise complex spectrum of disorders.


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