Abstract:
We used PET to test whether human premotor and posterior parietal
areas can subserve basic sensorimotor integration and sensorimotor
learning equivalently in response to auditory and visual stimuli, as has
been shown in frontoparietal neurons in non-human primates. Normal
subjects were studied while they performed a spatial compatibility task.
They were instructed to respond to lateralized auditory and visual
stimuli with the ipsilateral hand (compatible condition) or with the
contralateral hand (incompatible condition). Reaction times were faster
in the compatible than in the incompatible condition, for both auditory
and visual stimuli. Left rostral dorsal premotor and posterior parietal
blood-flow increases were observed in the incompatible condition,
compared with the compatible condition, for both auditory and visual
modalities. Blood-flow increases, which were correlated with the
reaction-time learning curves, were observed in both auditory and visual
modalities in the left caudal dorsal premotor cortex. These data suggest
that, as in non-human primates, human frontoparietal areas can subserve
basic sensorimotor transformations equivalently in the auditory and
visual modality. Further, they reveal a functional rostrocaudal
fractionation of human dorsal premotor cortex that resembles the
rostrocaudal anatomical and physiological fractionation observed in
non-human primates