| Literature DB >> 30365011 |
Eric Avila1, Kaushik J Lakshminarasimhan1, Gregory C DeAngelis2, Dora E Angelaki1,3.
Abstract
We examined the responses of neurons in posterior parietal area 7a to passive rotational and translational self-motion stimuli, while systematically varying the speed of visually simulated (optic flow cues) or actual (vestibular cues) self-motion. Contrary to a general belief that responses in area 7a are predominantly visual, we found evidence for a vestibular dominance in self-motion processing. Only a small fraction of neurons showed multisensory convergence of visual/vestibular and linear/angular self-motion cues. These findings suggest possibly independent neuronal population codes for visual versus vestibular and linear versus angular self-motion. Neural responses scaled with self-motion magnitude (i.e., speed) but temporal dynamics were diverse across the population. Analyses of laminar recordings showed a strong distance-dependent decrease for correlations in stimulus-induced (signal correlation) and stimulus-independent (noise correlation) components of spike-count variability, supporting the notion that neurons are spatially clustered with respect to their sensory representation of motion. Single-unit and multiunit response patterns were also correlated, but no other systematic dependencies on cortical layers or columns were observed. These findings describe a likely independent multimodal neural code for linear and angular self-motion in a posterior parietal area of the macaque brain that is connected to the hippocampal formation.Entities:
Keywords: angular rotation; electrophysiology; forward translation; multisensory representation; speed tuning
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30365011 PMCID: PMC6886513 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhy272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357