Complementary contribution of the medial and lateral human parietal cortex to grasping: a repetitive TMS study

Author:

Breveglieri Rossella1ORCID,Borgomaneri Sara23ORCID,Filippini Matteo1ORCID,Tessari Alessia4ORCID,Galletti Claudio1ORCID,Davare Marco5ORCID,Fattori Patrizia16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Bologna Department of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences, , 40126 Bologna , Italy

2. University of Bologna Center for studies and research in Cognitive Neuroscience, , 47521 Cesena , Italy

3. IRCCS Santa Lucia Foundation , 00179 Rome , Italy

4. University of Bologna Department of Psychology, , 40127 Bologna , Italy

5. Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine, King's College London, SE1 1UL London, United Kingdom

6. University of Bologna Alma Mater Research Institute For Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (Alma Human AI), , Bologna , Italy

Abstract

Abstract The dexterous control of our grasping actions relies on the cooperative activation of many brain areas. In the parietal lobe, 2 grasp-related areas collaborate to orchestrate an accurate grasping action: dorsolateral area AIP and dorsomedial area V6A. Single-cell recordings in monkeys and fMRI studies in humans have suggested that both these areas specify grip aperture and wrist orientation, but encode these grasping parameters differently, depending on the context. To elucidate the causal role of phAIP and hV6A, we stimulated these areas, while participants were performing grasping actions (unperturbed grasping). rTMS over phAIP impaired the wrist orientation process, whereas stimulation over hV6A impaired grip aperture encoding. In a small percentage of trials, an unexpected reprogramming of grip aperture or wrist orientation was required (perturbed grasping). In these cases, rTMS over hV6A or over phAIP impaired reprogramming of both grip aperture and wrist orientation. These results represent the first direct demonstration of a different encoding of grasping parameters by 2 grasp-related parietal areas.

Funder

Horizon 2020

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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