Selective recruitment of the cerebellum evidenced by task-dependent gating of inputs

Author:

Shahshahani Ladan12ORCID,King Maedbh3ORCID,Nettekoven Caroline1,Ivry Richard B45ORCID,Diedrichsen Jörn167ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Western Institute for Neuroscience, Western University, London

2. Cognitive, Linguistics, & Psychological Science, Brown University

3. McGovern Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

4. Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley

5. Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California Berkeley

6. Department of Statistical and Actuarial Sciences, Western University London

7. Department of Computer Science, Western University, London

Abstract

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have documented cerebellar activity across a wide array of tasks. However, the functional contribution of the cerebellum within these task domains remains unclear because cerebellar activity is often studied in isolation. This is problematic, as cerebellar fMRI activity may simply reflect the transmission of neocortical activity through fixed connections. Here, we present a new approach that addresses this problem. Rather than focus on task-dependent activity changes in the cerebellum alone, we ask if neocortical inputs to the cerebellum are gated in a task-dependent manner. We hypothesize that input is upregulated when the cerebellum functionally contributes to a task. We first validated this approach using a finger movement task, where the integrity of the cerebellum has been shown to be essential for the coordination of rapid alternating movements but not for force generation. While both neocortical and cerebellar activity increased with increasing speed and force, the speed-related changes in the cerebellum were larger than predicted by an optimized cortico-cerebellar connectivity model. We then applied the same approach in a cognitive domain, assessing how the cerebellum supports working memory. Enhanced gating was associated with the encoding of items in working memory, but not with the manipulation or retrieval of the items. Focusing on task-dependent gating of neocortical inputs to the cerebellum offers a promising approach for using fMRI to understand the specific contributions of the cerebellum to cognitive function.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Canada First Research Excellence Fund

Raynor Cerebellum Project

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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