4.8 Article

Decision formation in parietal cortex transcends a fixed frame of reference

Journal

NEURON
Volume 110, Issue 19, Pages 3206-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.07.019

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Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01-NS113113]

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Neurons in the lateral intraparietal cortex can represent the formation of a decision, but not across actions. However, by passing information between active and future active neurons, the ensemble achieves continuity of the decision process.
Neurons in the lateral intraparietal cortex represent the formation of a decision when it is linked to a specific action, such as an eye movement to a choice target. However, these neurons should be unable to represent a decision that transpires across actions that would disrupt this linkage. We investigated this limitation by simultaneously recording many neurons from two rhesus monkeys. Although intervening actions disrupt the representation by single neurons, the ensemble achieves continuity of the decision process by passing information from currently active neurons to neurons that will become active after the action. In this way, the representation of an evolving decision can be generalized across actions and transcends the frame of reference that specifies the neural response fields. The finding extends previous observations of receptive field remapping, thought to support the stability of perception across eye movements, to the continuity of a thought process, such as a decision.

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