Visual and Vestibular Selectivity for Self-Motion in Macaque Posterior Parietal Area 7a

Author:

Avila Eric1ORCID,Lakshminarasimhan Kaushik J1,DeAngelis Gregory C2ORCID,Angelaki Dora E13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA

2. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA

3. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA

Abstract

Abstract We examined the responses of neurons in posterior parietal area 7a to passive rotational and translational self-motion stimuli, while systematically varying the speed of visually simulated (optic flow cues) or actual (vestibular cues) self-motion. Contrary to a general belief that responses in area 7a are predominantly visual, we found evidence for a vestibular dominance in self-motion processing. Only a small fraction of neurons showed multisensory convergence of visual/vestibular and linear/angular self-motion cues. These findings suggest possibly independent neuronal population codes for visual versus vestibular and linear versus angular self-motion. Neural responses scaled with self-motion magnitude (i.e., speed) but temporal dynamics were diverse across the population. Analyses of laminar recordings showed a strong distance-dependent decrease for correlations in stimulus-induced (signal correlation) and stimulus-independent (noise correlation) components of spike-count variability, supporting the notion that neurons are spatially clustered with respect to their sensory representation of motion. Single-unit and multiunit response patterns were also correlated, but no other systematic dependencies on cortical layers or columns were observed. These findings describe a likely independent multimodal neural code for linear and angular self-motion in a posterior parietal area of the macaque brain that is connected to the hippocampal formation.

Funder

Simons Collaboration on the Global Brain

BRAIN Initiative

National Institutes of Health

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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