Lead Scientists

Junchol Park

Preprint

Conjoint specification of action by neocortex and striatum

Abstract

The interplay between two major forebrain structures - cortex and subcortical striatum - is critical for flexible, goal-directed action. Traditionally, it has been proposed that striatum is critical for selecting what type of action is initiated while the primary motor cortex is involved in the online control of movement execution. Recent data indicates that striatum may also be critical for specifying movement execution. These alternatives have been difficult to reconcile because when comparing very distinct actions, as done in the vast majority of work to date, they make essentially indistinguishable predictions. Here, we develop quantitative models to reveal a somewhat paradoxical insight: only comparing neural activity during similar actions makes strongly distinguishing predictions. We thus developed a novel reach-to-pull task in which mice reliably selected between two similar, but distinct reach targets and pull forces. Simultaneous cortical and subcortical recordings were uniquely consistent with a model in which cortex and striatum jointly specify flexible parameters of action during movement execution.

ParkEtAl-2023-Manuscript.pdf

Public data repository

Coming soon.

Apparatus Hardware

RIVETS | DUDMAN LAB

More coming soon.

Apparatus software control

https://github.com/janelia-pypi/mouse_joystick_interface_python

Analysis and simulation code

Collaborative work using a subset of this data

Preserved neural population dynamics across animals performing similar behaviour

Nonlinear manifolds underlie neural population activity during behaviour