Abstract: | After limb deafferentation, there was no gross alteration in the initiation and performance of a sound-triggered ballistic movement. The pattern of neuronal discharge in the arm area of the motor cortex was not significantly modified. In the absence of cerebellum, the reaction time of motor cortex cells was about 150 msec longer than the reaction time observed in normal and deafferented animals. This was associated with an equal retardation in the onset of ENG changes in the limb muscles. This observation is compatible with the idea that the motor cortex is normally situated downstream to the cerebellum in the initiation of some movements. However, the motor cortex is necessary for the initiation and execution of simple sound-triggered movements since its removal results in a permanent inability to perform the task. Finally, in the absence of peripheral feedback, the pattern of motor output to the agonistic and antagonistic muscles was initiated normally and thus appeared to be preprogrammed centrally. The importance of the motor cortex as a "reflex center" in the control of slower movements is obviously not challenged by these observations since the motor task that we have used depends very little or not at all on sensory feedback (Stark, 1968). What these results indicate, however, is that the execution of some voluntary fast ballistic movements can be entirely preprogrammed independently of peripheral and cerebellar influences, and that the program, which is mainly concerned with generating velocity signals, appears to require the integrity of the motor cortex for its execution. |