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AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

agricultural and biological sciences

No Discrete Start/Stop Signals in the Dorsal Striatum of Mice Performing a Learned Action

Current Biology, Volume 28, No. 19, Year 2018

A popular hypothesis is that the dorsal striatum generates discrete “traffic light” signals that initiate, maintain, and terminate the execution of learned actions. Alternatively, the striatum may continuously monitor the dynamics of movements associated with action execution by processing inputs from somatosensory and motor cortices. Here, we recorded the activity of striatal neurons in mice performing a run-and-stop task and characterized the diversity of firing rate modulations relative to run performance (tuning curves) across neurons. We found that the tuning curves could not be statistically clustered in discrete functional groups (start or stop neurons). Rather, their shape varied continuously according to the movement dynamics of the task. Moreover, striatal spiking activity correlated with running speed on a run-by-run basis and was modulated by task-related non-locomotor movements, such as licking. We hypothesize that such moment-to-moment movement monitoring by the dorsal striatum contributes to the learning of adaptive actions and/or updating their kinematics. It has been proposed that the striatum contributes to the execution of learned actions by generating start, maintain, and stop signals. Sales-Carbonell et al. show, in mice performing a run-and-stop task, that such discrete signals cannot be isolated statistically. Rather, the striatum continuously monitors the movement dynamics associated with task performance.
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Citations: 47
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