The brain is what makes us human. Feelings, memories, complex social interactions,
language and movement – all of it originates in the brain. On average, the human brain
contains approximately 50–100 billion neurons that communicate with each other through
the vast network of 100 – 500 trillion connections called synapses. More than half of the total
number of neurons make a structure called the cerebellum. In vertebrates, the cerebellum
(Latin for little brain) controls movement and monitors its efficiency by collecting sensory
information such as visual cues, limb positions and balance. This information is necessary
to adequately respond to the environment by controlling and correcting the movements.
Historically, since the 18th century when Arne – Charles Lorry showed that the damage to
this structure results in loss of motor coordination1, the cerebellum has been known to be
involved in motor coordination. In the 19th century neurophysiologists such as Luigi Rolando
and Jean Pierre Flourens revealed that animals with cerebellar damage can still move, but
with a loss of coordination and that recovery after the lesion can be nearly complete unless
the lesion is very extensive2. The milestone for understanding the cerebellum was placed
by the research of Camillo Golgi and Satiago Ramon y Cajal in the late 1800s. The work
of these anatomists enabled visualization of individual neurons revealing for the first time
the structural organization of the brain, including the cerebellum. More than a century later
researchers still battle with two main questions. Firstly, how does the cerebellar function
contribute and/or results in such a sophisticated level of motor coordination that enables us
to do things like playing the violin or ballroom dancing? Secondly, how do we acquire those
new motor skills? The cerebellar network seems to be holding the key to answering both of
those questions. It has the capacity to process the sensory information and translate it into a
motor command.
In this thesis, we describe the effects of alteration in the cerebellar system unraveling the
possible role of its afferent inputs.
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/22827/110330_Badura%2C%20Aleksandra%20Maria.pdf
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/22827/110330_Badura%2C%20Aleksandra%20Maria.pdf
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