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Goal-directed, serial and synchronous activation of neurons in the primate striatum
41
Citations
20
References
2003
Year
Brain MechanismMotor ControlProjection NeuronsNeural MechanismNeurodynamicsSerial ActivationCognitive NeuroscienceHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesMedicinePrimate StriatumSensorimotor IntegrationNervous SystemSynchronous ActivationNeurobiological MechanismNeural CircuitsMotor SystemProcedural MemoryNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemBasal Ganglia
To study roles of cortico-basal ganglia loops in action planning, we examined interactions between the activities of simultaneously recorded neurons in the striatum of monkeys performing sequence motor tasks by cross-correlation analysis. Serial activation occurred between projection neurons in a motor sequence-dependent manner, and was in the direction of a neuron encoding an early event in the sequence to a neuron encoding the same event or later, but closer event to the reward. Synchronous activation occurred between pairs of interneurons. The serial activation seems to originate through the cortico-basal ganglia loops, because projection neurons are inhibitory. We propose that the task-dependent serial and synchronous activation of striate neurons may be a neural substrate for goal-directed planning through the basal ganglia.
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