Coherent neuronal ensembles are rapidly recruited when making a look-reach decision.

Publication Type Academic Article
Authors Wong Y, Fabiszak M, Novikov Y, Daw N, Pesaran B
Journal Nat Neurosci
Volume 19
Issue 2
Pagination 327-34
Date Published 01/11/2016
ISSN 1546-1726
Keywords Decision Making, Neurons, Psychomotor Performance
Abstract Selecting and planning actions recruits neurons across many areas of the brain, but how ensembles of neurons work together to make decisions is unknown. Temporally coherent neural activity may provide a mechanism by which neurons coordinate their activity to make decisions. If so, neurons that are part of coherent ensembles may predict movement choices before other ensembles of neurons. We recorded neuronal activity in the lateral and medial banks of the intraparietal sulcus (IPS) of the posterior parietal cortex while monkeys made choices about where to look and reach. We decoded the activity to predict the choices. Ensembles of neurons that displayed coherent patterns of spiking activity extending across the IPS--'dual-coherent' ensembles--predicted movement choices substantially earlier than other neuronal ensembles. We propose that dual-coherent spike timing reflects interactions between groups of neurons that are important to decisions.
DOI 10.1038/nn.4210
PubMed ID 26752158
PubMed Central ID PMC4731255
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