Literature DB >> 17913908

Single-neuron stability during repeated reaching in macaque premotor cortex.

Cynthia A Chestek1, Aaron P Batista, Gopal Santhanam, Byron M Yu, Afsheen Afshar, John P Cunningham, Vikash Gilja, Stephen I Ryu, Mark M Churchland, Krishna V Shenoy.   

Abstract

Some movements that animals and humans make are highly stereotyped, repeated with little variation. The patterns of neural activity associated with repeats of a movement may be highly similar, or the same movement may arise from different patterns of neural activity, if the brain exploits redundancies in the neural projections to muscles. We examined the stability of the relationship between neural activity and behavior. We asked whether the variability in neural activity that we observed during repeated reaching was consistent with a noisy but stable relationship, or with a changing relationship, between neural activity and behavior. Monkeys performed highly similar reaches under tight behavioral control, while many neurons in the dorsal aspect of premotor cortex and the primary motor cortex were simultaneously monitored for several hours. Neural activity was predominantly stable over time in all measured properties: firing rate, directional tuning, and contribution to a decoding model that predicted kinematics from neural activity. The small changes in neural activity that we did observe could be accounted for primarily by subtle changes in behavior. We conclude that the relationship between neural activity and practiced behavior is reasonably stable, at least on timescales of minutes up to 48 h. This finding has significant implications for the design of neural prosthetic systems because it suggests that device recalibration need not be overly frequent, It also has implications for studies of neural plasticity because a stable baseline permits identification of nonstationary shifts.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17913908      PMCID: PMC6672821          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0959-07.2007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  68 in total

1.  An L₁-regularized logistic model for detecting short-term neuronal interactions.

Authors:  Mengyuan Zhao; Aaron Batista; John P Cunningham; Cynthia Chestek; Zuley Rivera-Alvidrez; Rachel Kalmar; Stephen Ryu; Krishna Shenoy; Satish Iyengar
Journal:  J Comput Neurosci       Date:  2011-10-22       Impact factor: 1.621

2.  Recording from the same neurons chronically in motor cortex.

Authors:  George W Fraser; Andrew B Schwartz
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2011-12-21       Impact factor: 2.714

Review 3.  Autonomous head-mounted electrophysiology systems for freely behaving primates.

Authors:  Vikash Gilja; Cindy A Chestek; Paul Nuyujukian; Justin Foster; Krishna V Shenoy
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2010-07-23       Impact factor: 6.627

4.  Reversible large-scale modification of cortical networks during neuroprosthetic control.

Authors:  Karunesh Ganguly; Dragan F Dimitrov; Jonathan D Wallis; Jose M Carmena
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2011-04-17       Impact factor: 24.884

Review 5.  Techniques for extracting single-trial activity patterns from large-scale neural recordings.

Authors:  Mark M Churchland; Byron M Yu; Maneesh Sahani; Krishna V Shenoy
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2007-10       Impact factor: 6.627

6.  Factor-analysis methods for higher-performance neural prostheses.

Authors:  Gopal Santhanam; Byron M Yu; Vikash Gilja; Stephen I Ryu; Afsheen Afshar; Maneesh Sahani; Krishna V Shenoy
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2009-03-18       Impact factor: 2.714

7.  Cue to action processing in motor cortex populations.

Authors:  Naveen G Rao; John P Donoghue
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2013-10-30       Impact factor: 2.714

8.  Toward optimal target placement for neural prosthetic devices.

Authors:  John P Cunningham; Byron M Yu; Vikash Gilja; Stephen I Ryu; Krishna V Shenoy
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2008-10-01       Impact factor: 2.714

9.  Concurrent stable and unstable cortical correlates of human wrist movements.

Authors:  Matthias Witte; Ferran Galán; Stephan Waldert; Christoph Braun; Carsten Mehring
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2014-01-22       Impact factor: 5.038

10.  Adaptation to a cortex-controlled robot attached at the pelvis and engaged during locomotion in rats.

Authors:  Weiguo Song; Simon F Giszter
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2011-02-23       Impact factor: 6.167

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