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Medicine LibreTexts

10: The Motor System

  • Page ID
    151259
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    • 10.1: Introduction
      This page explains the motor system, which controls body movements through nerve cells. It highlights two main functions: executing voluntary movements and regulating involuntary actions. Motor control is depicted as a feedback loop involving sensory and motor cortices for accurate movement execution. The text illustrates motor control through nested loops like reflexes and communication within brain regions, and outlines the journey of motor signals from the brain to the muscles.
    • 10.2: Motor Control in the Brain
      This page explores the neural mechanisms underlying voluntary movement, highlighting the roles of key brain regions such as the frontal lobe and motor cortex in planning and executing actions. It emphasizes the integration of cognitive evaluation and sensory feedback, particularly proprioception, in refining motor commands.
    • 10.3: Modifiers of Descending Information
      This page outlines key brain structures involved in motor control, emphasizing the cerebellum's role in coordination, balance, and cognitive functions. It details the cerebellum's regions, their specific functions, and ataxia as a consequence of dysfunction. The importance of the basal ganglia in movement and habit learning is highlighted, noting the striatum's contributions and the impact of dysregulation.
    • 10.4: The Spinal Cord
      This page covers the spinal cord's structure and function, highlighting its role in controlling voluntary movements via motor cortex output, as well as its connection to reflexes and automatic responses. It explains the function of central pattern generators (CPGs) in generating rhythmic behaviors like breathing and walking, which operate independently of brain input but can be adapted by brain signals, reflecting their evolutionary importance in motor control.
    • 10.5: The Muscles
      This page covers the neuromuscular junction (NMJ), where motor neurons use acetylcholine to initiate muscle contraction via nicotinic receptors. It outlines muscle anatomy, differentiating between skeletal, smooth, and cardiac muscles, and describes muscle contractions at the sarcomere level involving actin and myosin.
    • 10.6: References


    This page titled 10: The Motor System is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Austin Lim via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.

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