In classical cytoarchitectonics,
Brodmann area 4 (BA4) corresponds to primary motor cortex (M1) occupying the
precentral gyrus and the anterior bank of the
central sulcus, with medial continuation in the anterior (motor) portion of the
paracentral lobule. Its posterior border abuts primary somatosensory cortex (BA3,1,2) along the lip and wall of the central sulcus; its anterior border is the precentral sulcus where area 6 begins. Receptorarchitectonic work subdivides BA4 into a posterior field (4p) concentrated along the sulcal wall and an anterior field (4a) on the gyral crown. Area 6 lies anterior to BA4 across the superior and middle frontal gyri and includes the lateral premotor cortex; on the medial wall it encompasses the supplementary and pre‑supplementary motor areas.
Premotor cortex Premotor cortex is commonly divided into dorsal (PMd) and ventral (PMv) sectors, each with rostral and caudal parts. PMd contributes to reach planning and selection among competing directions, whereas PMv is heavily involved in shaping the hand for grasp and in multisensory guidance of actions in peri‑personal space. These areas are part of a broader parieto‑frontal system linking dorsal visual streams with motor plans, and their boundaries lie within cytoarchitectonic area 6 lateral to BA4.
Eye‑movement motor fields (FEF/SEF) The frontal eye field (FEF) in the precentral/premotor region and the supplementary eye field (SEF) on the dorsomedial wall form part of the motor network controlling saccades,
smooth pursuit and eye–head coordination. FEF receives visual input from occipito‑temporal pathways and projects to the
superior colliculus and brainstem gaze centers; SEF participates in internally generated saccade sequences and performance monitoring. Microstimulation of FEF evokes fixed‑vector saccades, whereas SEF stimulation elicits context‑dependent eye movements and sequence effects.
Supplementary motor area (SMA) Electrical stimulation and functional imaging implicate SMA in initiating internally generated action and in sequencing. SMA also contains a coarse, overlapping body map and sends direct corticospinal projections. Lesions or inactivation can impair movement initiation and transiently abolish bimanual coordination in non‑human primates. == Cytoarchitecture and connectivity ==