TopicNeuroscience

ramping activity

Content Overview
2Total items
1Seminar
1ePoster

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Experience-dependent remapping of temporal encoding by striatal ensembles

Austin Bruce
University of Iowa, USA
Feb 17, 2021

Medium-spiny neurons (MSNs) in the striatum are required for interval timing, or the estimation of the time over several seconds via a motor response. We and others have shown that striatal MSNs can encode the duration of temporal intervals via time-dependent ramping activity, progressive monotonic changes in firing rate preceding behaviorally salient points in time. Here, we investigated how timing-related activity within striatal ensembles changes with experience. We leveraged a rodent-optimized interval timing task in which mice ‘switch’ response ports after an amount of time has passed without reward. We report three main results. First, we found that the proportion of MSNs exhibiting time-dependent modulations of firing rate increased after 10 days of task overtraining. Second, temporal decoding by MSN ensembles increased with experience and was largely driven by time-related ramping activity. Finally, we found that time-related ramping activity generalized across both correct and error trials. These results enhance our understanding of striatal temporal processing by demonstrating that time-dependent activity within MSN ensembles evolves with experience and is dissociable from motor- and reward-related processes.

ePosterNeuroscience

PRESERVED NAVIGATION WITH ALTERED REWARD-MODULATED RAMPING ACTIVITY IN MEDIAL ENTORHINAL CORTEX IN FRAGILE X MICE

Yiming Zhao

FENS Forum 2026

ramping activity coverage

2 items

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ePoster1

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