نتایج جستجو برای: supplementary motor area

تعداد نتایج: 757588  

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 1997
G R Fink R S Frackowiak U Pietrzyk R E Passingham

We measured the distribution of regional cerebral blood flow with positron emission tomography while three subjects moved their hand, shoulder, or leg. The images were coregistered with each individual's anatomic magnetic resonance scans. The data were analyzed for each individual to avoid intersubject averaging and so to preserve individual gyral anatomy. Instead of inspecting all pixels, we p...

2015
Marie-Cécile Nierat Anna L. Hudson Joël Chaskalovic Thomas Similowski Louis Laviolette

In awake humans, breathing depends on automatic brainstem pattern generators. It is also heavily influenced by cortical networks. For example, functional magnetic resonance imaging and electroencephalographic data show that the supplementary motor area becomes active when breathing is made difficult by inspiratory mechanical loads like resistances or threshold valves, which is associated with p...

Journal: :Neuroscience research 2013
Kevin D'Ostilio Benjamin Deville Julien Cremers Julien Grandjean Eva Skawiniak Valérie Delvaux Gaëtan Garraux

The role of the basal ganglia-cortical motor loop in automatic and unconscious motor processes is poorly understood. Here, we used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging in 11 de novo Parkinson's disease patients as they performed a visuomotor masked priming task. The stronger subliminal priming effect for the non-dominant side of motor symptoms than for the dominant side was paral...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 2006
Pascale Michelon Jean M Vettel Jeffrey M Zacks

Motor imagery is a complex cognitive operation that requires memory retrieval, spatial attention, and possibly computations that are analogs of the physical movements being imagined. Likewise, motor preparation may or may not involve computations that are analogs of actual movements. To test whether motor imagery or motor preparation activate representations that are specific to the body part w...

2005
Pascale Michelon Jean M. Vettel Jeffrey M. Zacks

Motor imagery is a complex cognitive operation that requires memory retrieval, spatial attention, and possibly computations that are analogs of the physical movements being imagined. Likewise, motor preparation may or may not involve computations that are analogs of actual movements. To test whether motor imagery or motor preparation activate representations that are specific to the body part w...

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