Cell Reports (Dec 2018)

Condition-Dependent Neural Dimensions Progressively Shift during Reach to Grasp

  • Adam G. Rouse,
  • Marc H. Schieber

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 11
pp. 3158 – 3168.e3

Abstract

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Summary: Neural population space analysis was performed to assess the dimensionality and dynamics of the neural population in the primary motor cortex (M1) during a reach-grasp-manipulation task in which both the reach location and the object being grasped were varied. We partitioned neural activity into three components: (1) general task-related activity independent of location and object, (2) location- and/or object-related activity, and (3) noise. Neural modulation related to location and/or object was only one-third the size of either general task modulation or noise. The neural dimensions of location and/or object-related activity overlapped with both the general task and noise dimensions. Rather than large amplitude modulation in a fixed set of dimensions, the active dimensions of location and/or object modulation shifted progressively over the time course of a trial. : Rouse and Schieber show that during reach-grasp-manipulate movements, M1 activity related to location and object occurs not in a fixed set but rather in a shifting set of neural dimensions that overlap with those of general task and noise activity. Keywords: primary motor cortex, population dynamics, reaching, grasping, manipulation, dimensionality reduction, neural population, demixed PCA, state space, neural variability