Cell
Volume 181, Issue 2, 16 April 2020, Pages 396-409.e26
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Article
Hand Knob Area of Premotor Cortex Represents the Whole Body in a Compositional Way

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2020.02.043Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • “Hand knob” area of premotor cortex is tuned to the entire body

  • A compositional neural code links matching movements from all 4 limbs

  • Separate coding of the movement and limb to be moved may facilitate skill transfer

  • A discrete BCI can accurately decode movements of all 4 limbs from hand knob

Summary

Decades after the motor homunculus was first proposed, it is still unknown how different body parts are intermixed and interrelated in human motor cortical areas at single-neuron resolution. Using multi-unit recordings, we studied how face, head, arm, and leg movements are represented in the hand knob area of premotor cortex (precentral gyrus) in people with tetraplegia. Contrary to traditional expectations, we found strong representation of all movements and a partially “compositional” neural code that linked together all four limbs. The code consisted of (1) a limb-coding component representing the limb to be moved and (2) a movement-coding component where analogous movements from each limb (e.g., hand grasp and toe curl) were represented similarly. Compositional coding might facilitate skill transfer across limbs, and it provides a useful framework for thinking about how the motor system constructs movement. Finally, we leveraged these results to create a whole-body intracortical brain-computer interface that spreads targets across all limbs.

Keywords

motor cortex
hand knob
neural coding
skill transfer
microelectrode array
brain-computer interface

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12

These authors contributed equally

13

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