J. Cogn. Neurosci.
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(Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 2004;16:621-636.)
© 2004 The MIT Press

Motor Sequence Complexity and Performing Hand Produce Differential Patterns of Hemispheric Lateralization

Kathleen Y. Haaland

New Mexico Veterans Affairs Health Care System
University of New Mexico

Catherine L. Elsinger

Medical College of Wisconsin

Andrew R. Mayer

University of New Mexico School of Medicine

Sally Durgerian and Stephen M. Rao

Medical College of Wisconsin

Studies in brain damaged patients conclude that the left hemisphere is dominant for controlling heterogeneous sequences performed by either hand, presumably due to the cognitive resources involved in planning complex sequential movements. To determine if this lateralized effect is due to asymmetries in primary sensorimotor or association cortex, whole-brain functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure differences in volume of activation while healthy right-handed subjects performed repetitive (simple) or heterogeneous (complex) finger sequences using the right or left hand. Advanced planning, as evidenced by reaction time to the first key press, was greater for the complex than simple sequences and for the left than right hand. In addition to the expected greater contralateral activation in the sensorimotor cortex (SMC), greater left hemisphere activation was observed for left, relative to right, hand movements in the ipsilateral left superior parietal area and for complex, relative to simple, sequences in the left premotor and parietal cortex, left thalamus, and bilateral cerebellum. No such volumetric asymmetries were observed in the SMC. Whereas the overall MR signal intensity was greater in the left than right SMC, the extent of this asymmetry did not vary with hand or complexity level. In contrast, signal intensity in the parietal and premotor cortex was greater in the left than right hemisphere and for the complex than simple sequences. Signal intensity in the caudal anterior cerebellum was greater bilaterally for the complex than simple sequences. These findings suggest that activity in the SMC is associated with execution requirements shared by the simple and complex sequences independent of their differential cognitive requirements. In contrast, consistent with data in brain damaged patients, the left dorsal premotor and parietal areas are engaged when advanced planning is required to perform complex motor sequences that require selection of different effectors and abstract organization of the sequence, regardless of the performing hand.


Key Words: Functional magnetic resonance imaging • cerebral lateralization • motor sequencing • basal ganglia • cerebellum • motor cortex • parietal cortex • premotor cortex • thalamus




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