Abstract

The parietal lobe has been implicated in the sensorimotor control and integration that supports the skillful use of our hands to reach for, grasp, and manipulate objects in the environment. This area is involved in several circuits within the classic subdivisions of the dorsal stream. Recently, the dorsal stream has been further divided into a "dorso-dorsal" and a "ventro-dorsal" streams. The ventro-dorsal stream is regarded as functionally linked to object manipulation. The dorso-dorsal stream is proposed to subserve reaching and online control of actions. Affordances indicate action possibilities characterized by object properties the environment provides. Affordances are likely represented by the dorsal stream. They code structural object properties that can elicit actions. A further subdivision of affordances into "stable" and "variable" allows an understanding of the neuronal mechanisms underlying object manipulation. Whereas stable affordances emerge from slow processing of visual information based on knowledge of object properties from previous experiences and object interaction, variable affordances emerge from fast online processing of visual information during actual object interaction, within a changing environment. The relevance of the dorsal stream subdivisions in this context is that the dorso-dorsal stream is associated with coding of variable affordances, while that of the dorso-ventral stream is implicated in action representations elicited by stable affordances. A greater interaction between these and ventral stream perceptual and semantic representations allows the parietal control of hand movement. An understanding of these networks is likely to underlie recovery from complex deficits described in limb apraxias.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call