Abstract

Comprehensive knowledge about higher executive functions of motor control has been covered in the last decades. Critical goals have been targeted through many different technological approaches. An abundant flow of new results greatly progressed our ability to respond at better-posited answers to look more than ever at the challenging neural system functioning. Behaviour is the observable result of the invisible, as complex cerebral functioning. Many pathological states are approached after symptomatology categorisation of behavioural impairments is achieved. Motor, non-motor and psychiatric signs are greatly shared by many neurological/psychiatric disorders. Together with the cerebral cortex, the basal ganglia contribute to the expression of behaviour promoting the correct action schemas and the selection of appropriate sub-goals based on the evaluation of action outcomes. The present review focus on the basic classification of higher motor control functioning, taking into account the recent advances in basal ganglia structural knowledge and the computational model of basal ganglia functioning. We discuss about the basal ganglia capability in executing ordered motor patterns in which any single movement is linked to each other into an action, and many actions are ordered into each other, giving them a syntactic value to the final behaviour. The stereotypic, automatized and habitual behaviour's constructs and controls are the expression of successive stages of rule internalization and categorisation aimed in producing the perfect spatial-temporal control of motor command.

Highlights

  • Human behaviour expresses through a large range of movements from simpler reflex to complex and purposeful motor acts

  • Together with the cerebral cortex, the basal ganglia contribute to the expression of behaviour promoting the correct action schemas and the selection of appropriate sub-goals based on the evaluation of action outcomes

  • The present review focus on the basic classification of higher motor control functioning, taking into account the recent advances in basal ganglia structural knowledge and the computational model of basal ganglia functioning

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Summary

Introduction

Human behaviour expresses through a large range of movements from simpler reflex to complex and purposeful motor acts. If some functional features of motor control can be found in a variety of vertebrate model systems, it means that genetic mechanisms had repeatedly fixed the results of newly emerging behaviours resulting from the reorganisation of neural networks, confirming the usefulness of such strategy through different organisms [1]. The proposed executive BG motor control [30,31], consisting in the ability to detect rules between events, can provide a conceivable framework between motor impairments and psychiatric disorders [32] This being a useful tool in selecting effective pharmacological approaches and physical activities that could significantly improve brain plasticity and cognitive functions [33,34,35]

Defining rules
BG features
Recent BG investigations
Outcomes
Full Text
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