temporal production signals in parietal cortex颞顶叶皮层的生产信号.pdf
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Temporal Production Signals in Parietal Cortex
Blaine A. Schneider, Geoffrey M. Ghose*
Department of Neuroscience, Center for Magnetic Resonance Research, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States of America
Abstract
We often perform movements and actions on the basis of internal motivations and without any explicit instructions or cues.
One common example of such behaviors is our ability to initiate movements solely on the basis of an internally generated
sense of the passage of time. In order to isolate the neuronal signals responsible for such timed behaviors, we devised a task
that requires nonhuman primates to move their eyes consistently at regular time intervals in the absence of any external
stimulus events and without an immediate expectation of reward. Despite the lack of sensory information, we found that
animals were remarkably precise and consistent in timed behaviors, with standard deviations on the order of 100 ms. To
examine the potential neural basis of this precision, we recorded from single neurons in the lateral intraparietal area (LIP),
which has been implicated in the planning and execution of eye movements. In contrast to previous studies that observed a
build-up of activity associated with the passage of time, we found that LIP activity decreased at a constant rate between
timed movements. Moreover, the magnitude of activity was predictive of the timing of the impending movement.
Interestingly, this relationship depended on eye movement direction: activity was negatively correlated with timing when
the upcoming saccade was toward the neuron’s response field and positively correlated when the upcoming saccade was
directed away from the response field. This suggests that LIP activity encodes timed movements in a push-pull manner by
signaling for both saccade initiation towards one target and p
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