Publication | Closed Access
Optical Imaging of Neuronal Populations During Decision-Making
354
Citations
28
References
2005
Year
Cognitive ScienceNeural MechanismIdentical Sensory InputsNeurodynamicsNeurophysiologyComputational NeuroscienceCell 208Sensorimotor TransformationBrain MechanismSocial SciencesNeuroscienceVisual PathwayCentral Nervous SystemNervous SystemVisual ProcessingPrincipal Component AnalysisOptical Imaging
We investigated decision-making in the leech nervous system by stimulating identical sensory inputs that sometimes elicit crawling and other times swimming. Neuronal populations were monitored with voltage-sensitive dyes after each stimulus. By quantifying the discrimination time of each neuron, we found single neurons that discriminate before the two behaviors are evident. We used principal component analysis and linear discriminant analysis to find populations of neurons that discriminated earlier than any single neuron. The analysis highlighted the neuron cell 208. Hyperpolarizing cell 208 during a stimulus biases the leech to swim; depolarizing it biases the leech to crawl or to delay swimming.
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