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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Motor Cortex in Theory and Practice

Mark Churchland

Columbia University, New York

Schedule
Monday, November 30, 2020

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Schedule

Monday, November 30, 2020

6:00 PM Europe/Berlin

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Host: BCCN Munich lecture series

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Recording provided by the organiser.

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Host

BCCN Munich lecture series

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

A central question in motor physiology has been whether motor cortex activity resembles muscle activity, and if not, why not? Over fifty years, extensive observations have failed to provide a concise answer, and the topic remains much debated. To provide a different perspective, we employed a novel behavioral paradigm that affords extensive comparison between time-evolving neural and muscle activity. Single motor-cortex neurons displayed many muscle-like properties, but the structure of population activity was not muscle-like. Unlike muscle activity, neural activity was structured to avoid ’trajectory tangling’: moments where similar activity patterns led to dissimilar future patterns. Avoidance of trajectory tangling was present across tasks and species. Network models revealed a potential reason for this consistent feature: low tangling confers noise robustness. Remarkably, we were able to predict motor cortex activity from muscle activity alone, by leveraging the hypothesis that muscle-like commands are embedded in additional structure that yields low tangling. Our results argue that motor cortex embeds descending commands in additional structure that ensure low tangling, and thus noise-robustness. The dominant structure in motor cortex may thus serve not a representational function (encoding specific variables) but a computational function: ensuring that outgoing commands can be generated reliably. Our results establish the utility of an emerging approach: understanding the structure of neural activity based on properties of population geometry that flow from normative principles such as noise robustness.

Topics

behavioural paradigmdescending commandsmotor cortexmuscle activitynetwork modelsneural activitynoise robustnesspopulation activitytrajectory tangling

About the Speaker

Mark Churchland

Columbia University, New York

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

churchland.zuckermaninstitute.columbia.edu/people/mark-m-churchland

@MarkChurchland

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/MarkChurchland

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