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How cortical populations support complex behavior - Anne Churchland

October 8, 2015 -
12:00pm to 1:00pm
Clark Center Auditorium

Stanford Neurosciences Institute Seminar Series Presents

 

One structure, many demands: how cortical populations support complex behavior

 

 

Anne Churchland, Ph.D

 

 

Associate Professor, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

 

Host: Tom Clandinin

Abstract

The posterior parietal cortex (PPC) receives diverse inputs and is involved in a dizzying array of behaviors. These many behaviors could rely on distinct categories of neurons specialized to represent particular variables or could rely on a single population of PPC neurons that is leveraged in different ways. To distinguish these possibilities, we evaluated rat PPC neurons recorded during multisensory decisions. Newly designed tests revealed that task parameters and temporal response features were distributed randomly across neurons, without evidence of categories. This suggests that PPC neurons constitute a dynamic network that is decoded according to the animal’s present needs. To test for an additional signature of a dynamic network, we compared moments when behavioral demands differed: decision and movement. Our new state-space analysis revealed that the network explored different dimensions during decision and movement. These observations suggest that a single network of neurons can support the evolving behavioral demands of decision-making.

Event Sponsor: 
Stanford Neurosciences Institute
Contact Email: 
neuroscience@stanford.edu
Contact Phone: 
650-497-8019