4.7 Article

Functional Significance of Nonspatial Information in Monkey Lateral Intraparietal Area

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 29, Issue 25, Pages 8166-8176

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0243-09.2009

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Funding

  1. National Eye Institute [R01 EY014697-01, R24 EY015634]
  2. The Keck Foundation

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Although the parietal cortex is traditionally associated with spatial perception and motor planning, recent evidence shows that neurons in the lateral intraparietal area (LIP) carry both spatial and nonspatial signals. The functional significance of the nonspatial information in the parietal cortex is not understood. To address this question, we tested the effect of unilateral reversible inactivation of LIP on three behavioral tasks known to evoke nonspatial responses. Each task included a spatial component (target selection in the hemifield contralateral or ipsilateral to the inactivation) and a nonspatial component, namely limb motor planning, the estimation of elapsed time, and reward-based decisions. Although inactivation reliably impaired performance on all tasks, the deficits were spatially specific (restricted to contralateral target locations), and there were no effects on nonspatial aspects on performance. This suggests that modulatory nonspatial signals in LIP represent feedback about computations performed elsewhere rather than a primary role of LIP in these computations.

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