This PPG proposal describes a collaborative effort by five distinguished motor systems groups at five prominent institutions. We will probe the brain's remarkable capacity for the Integration of Motor Programs Across Space and Time. Dr. Scott Grafton, at Dartmouth College, will characterize the neural substrates for the on-line adjustment of errors, for adaptation to persistent perturbations and for skill learning in humans, using functional MRI and transcranial magnetic stimulation. Dr. Emilio Bizzi, at MIT, will develop a new perspective on how the motor cortex solves the problem of transforming a planned hand movement into the intricate set of motor commands needed to carry out this task. Dr. Peter Strick, at the University of Pittsburgh, will characterize how sequences of movements are merged together and adjusted on-line to create skilled actions, using microelectrode recording in non-human primates and 2DG labeling of activity in the motor areas. Dr. James Houk, at Northwestern University, will characterize the regulatory actions of subcortical loops through the basal ganglia and cerebellum in each of the above tasks, using paired microelectrode recordings from subcortical neurons and the cortical neurons to which they project. Dr. Andy Barto, at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, will explore computation models of each of the motor tasks. Core A support for videoconferencing and administration will facilitate strategic collaborations between the investigators at different institutions, and a Collaborative Core B will fund collaborations between two or more of the PIs to facilitate our ability to compare neurophysiologic data spanning a broad range of both spatial and temporal resolution. The support of these interrelated projects should yield results beyond those achievable if each project were pursued separately, and can be expected to significantly advance our knowledge about how motor programs are integrated across space and time.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01NS044393-02
Application #
6760065
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZNS1-SRB-A (01))
Program Officer
Chen, Daofen
Project Start
2003-06-15
Project End
2008-05-31
Budget Start
2004-06-01
Budget End
2005-05-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2004
Total Cost
$1,253,649
Indirect Cost
Name
Northwestern University at Chicago
Department
Physiology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
005436803
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60611
Kahn, Ari E; Mattar, Marcelo G; Vettel, Jean M et al. (2017) Structural Pathways Supporting Swift Acquisition of New Visuomotor Skills. Cereb Cortex 27:173-184
Ramkumar, Pavan; Acuna, Daniel E; Berniker, Max et al. (2016) Chunking as the result of an efficiency computation trade-off. Nat Commun 7:12176
Ohbayashi, Machiko; Picard, Nathalie; Strick, Peter L (2016) Inactivation of the Dorsal Premotor Area Disrupts Internally Generated, But Not Visually Guided, Sequential Movements. J Neurosci 36:1971-6
Crossley, Matthew J; Horvitz, Jon C; Balsam, Peter D et al. (2016) Expanding the role of striatal cholinergic interneurons and the midbrain dopamine system in appetitive instrumental conditioning. J Neurophysiol 115:240-54
Overduin, Simon A; d'Avella, Andrea; Roh, Jinsook et al. (2015) Representation of Muscle Synergies in the Primate Brain. J Neurosci 35:12615-24
Wymbs, Nicholas F; Grafton, Scott T (2015) The Human Motor System Supports Sequence-Specific Representations over Multiple Training-Dependent Timescales. Cereb Cortex 25:4213-25
Gu, Shi; Pasqualetti, Fabio; Cieslak, Matthew et al. (2015) Controllability of structural brain networks. Nat Commun 6:8414
Acuna, Daniel E; Berniker, Max; Fernandes, Hugo L et al. (2015) Using psychophysics to ask if the brain samples or maximizes. J Vis 15:
Cieslak, Matthew; Ingham, Roger J; Ingham, Janis C et al. (2015) Anomalous white matter morphology in adults who stutter. J Speech Lang Hear Res 58:268-77
Smith, J David; Zakrzewski, Alexandria C; Johnston, Jennifer J R et al. (2015) Generalization of category knowledge and dimensional categorization in humans (Homo sapiens) and nonhuman primates (Macaca mulatta). J Exp Psychol Anim Learn Cogn 41:322-35

Showing the most recent 10 out of 114 publications