Abstract:
Using PET and H215O, we investigated the cortical areas that merge
two different ways of coding space in the cerebral cortex, those
concerned with the oculomotor and the somatomotor space. Normal subjects
performed a visuomotor task that required the spatial coding of visual
stimuli in oculomotor space and of motor responses in somatomotor space.
We manipulated the mapping of oculomotor and somatomotor space by
instructing subjects to respond in half of the PET scans with uncrossed
hands, i.e. each hand was in the homonymous hemispace (standard
oculomotor-somatomotor mapping), and in the other half with crossed
hands, i.e. with the left hand in the right hemispace and the right hand
in the left hemispace (nonstandard oculomotor-somatomotor mapping).
Reaction times were slower for crossed hands than uncrossed hands.
Crossed hands produced increases in blood flow in the precentral and
postcentral gyri of the right hemisphere. Increases in blood flow in the
precentral gyrus were correlated with increases in reaction time
comparing the crossed-hand task with the uncrossed one, whereas the
increases in blood flow in the postcentral gyrus were not. These
findings suggest that the right precentral gyrus merges oculomotor and
somatomotor space coding in the human brain