Author:
Srivastava Kyle H.,Holmes Caroline M.,Vellema Michiel,Pack Andrea R.,Elemans Coen P. H.,Nemenman Ilya,Sober Samuel J.
Abstract
A fundamental problem in neuroscience is understanding how sequences of action potentials (“spikes”) encode information about sensory signals and motor outputs. Although traditional theories assume that this information is conveyed by the total number of spikes fired within a specified time interval (spike rate), recent studies have shown that additional information is carried by the millisecond-scale timing patterns of action potentials (spike timing). However, it is unknown whether or how subtle differences in spike timing drive differences in perception or behavior, leaving it unclear whether the information in spike timing actually plays a role in brain function. By examining the activity of individual motor units (the muscle fibers innervated by a single motor neuron) and manipulating patterns of activation of these neurons, we provide both correlative and causal evidence that the nervous system uses millisecond-scale variations in the timing of spikes within multispike patterns to control a vertebrate behavior—namely, respiration in the Bengalese finch, a songbird. These findings suggest that a fundamental assumption of current theories of motor coding requires revision.
Funder
HHS | National Institutes of Health
National Science Foundation
James S. McDonnell Foundation
Danish Research Council
Carlsbergfondet
Woodruff Scholarship at Emory University
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
102 articles.
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