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Journal Article

Citation

Richer F, Chouinard MJ, Rouleau I. Neuropsychologia 1999; 37(12): 1427-1435.

Affiliation

Service de Neurologie, Hôpital Notre-Dame, Laboratoire de Neuroscience de la Cognition, Université du Québec, Montréal, Canada. Richer.Francois@uqam.ca

Copyright

(Copyright © 1999, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10606016

Abstract

This study examined the effects of frontal lobe lesions on the control of movements during motor learning. We compared the performance of patients with unilateral frontal or temporal excisions and controls in two-dimensional aiming movements during adaptation to a transformed visuomotor mapping. Subjects tried to reach a fixed target on a graphics tablet using indirect visual control from a monitor in either: (1) the standard visuomotor mapping, (2) a full inversion of motor space preserving the axis of movement, or (3) a mirror-like inversion of one axis of motor space. In the standard mapping, all groups showed precise and rapid aiming movements. In the full inversion condition, frontal lobe patients showed a stronger tendency than others to initiate movements in the natural direction (capture errors) during adaptation. In the mirror-like inversion, frontal patients showed deficits in both movement initiation and movement corrections. These control deficits disappeared with practice. These data provide evidence for a critical role of frontal cortex in the attentional control of unpracticed movements in man.


Language: en

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