Eg. Butler et al., NEURONAL-ACTIVITY IN THE MONKEY VENTROLATERAL THALAMUS FOLLOWING PERTURBATIONS OF VOLUNTARY WRIST MOVEMENTS, Experimental Brain Research, 118(3), 1998, pp. 393-407
Extracellular single-cell recordings were made from the cerebellar tha
lamus (89 neurones) and the VPLc (53 neurones) of three conscious monk
eys. The animals were trained to perform wrist movement paradigms incl
uding: (a) visually triggered skilled, voluntary movements; (b) 100-ms
duration torque pulse perturbations applied during a hold period (ter
med Pa perturbations); (c) 100-ms perturbations that commenced 100 ms
after the visual trigger but during preparation before a skilled, volu
ntary movement (termed Pb perturbations); and (d) 100-ms perturbations
during the skilled, voluntary movement (termed Pm perturbations). The
se Pb and Pm perturbations were used to identify central and periphera
l influences on patterns of neuronal discharge in the ventrolateral th
alamus. There was no systematic difference between the responses to Pb
and Pm perturbations of neurones in the cerebellar thalamus and those
in VPLc. The responses of VPLc and cerebellar thalamic neurones to Pa
perturbations were considered to represent transduction of peripheral
afferent input, and these responses were compared with the responses
to the other types of perturbations. Up to 40% of neurones in cerebell
ar thalamus and VPLc responded to Pb and Pm perturbations in a similar
pattern to that which followed Pa perturbations, and therefore most l
ikely represented faithful transduction of peripheral input. However,
the response of over half the neurones in VPLc and cerebellar thalamus
to Pb or Pm perturbations differed from Pa perturbations in a manner
suggesting that central influences had gated the peripheral input. The
short-latency response in cerebellar thalamus which was modified by c
entral influences is appropriately timed to contribute to the ''intend
ed'' response to perturbations of motor cortical neurones.