2001
DOI: 10.1152/jn.2001.85.2.998
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Context Dependency in the Globus Pallidus Internal Segment During Targeted Arm Movements

Abstract: Extracellular discharges from single neurons in the internal segment of the globus pallidus (GPi) were recorded and analyzed for rate changes associated with visually guided forearm rotations to four different targets. We sought to examine how GPi neurons contribute to movement preparation and execution. Unit discharge from 108 GPi neurons recorded in 35 electrode penetrations was aligned to the time of various behavioral events, including the onset of cued and return movements. In total, 39 of 108 GPi neurons… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…In summary, the results of this study extend and quantify our prior descriptive analysis of the selective modulation GPi neurons in association with movements generated in specific behavioral contexts (Gdowski et al, 2001). In the present study, nearly 100% (80/82) of the task-modulated GPi neurons had 20-80% reductions of their depths of modulation during the return, unrewarded movements relative to during cued, rewarded movements.…”
Section: Summary and Interpretationssupporting
confidence: 82%
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“…In summary, the results of this study extend and quantify our prior descriptive analysis of the selective modulation GPi neurons in association with movements generated in specific behavioral contexts (Gdowski et al, 2001). In the present study, nearly 100% (80/82) of the task-modulated GPi neurons had 20-80% reductions of their depths of modulation during the return, unrewarded movements relative to during cued, rewarded movements.…”
Section: Summary and Interpretationssupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Neuron P229 (A) had significant increases in discharge in association with cued movements to all four targets, but not during the return movements. We have observed such differences in GPi discharge previously, which we described as "context dependent" to denote that the neuronal response was contingent upon the behavioral setting during which movements were executed (Gdowski et al, 2001). As indicated in Table 2, 42 neurons (53%) were modulated like neuron P229 shown in Figure 2A, displaying statistically significant increases in discharge in association with the cued movements.…”
Section: Neurons With Increasing and Decreasing Responsesmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…For example, reward prediction errors, often referred to as temporal difference error in reinforcement learning algorithms, are encoded by the midbrain dopamine neurons (Schultz, 1998). Similarly, activity of neurons coding the metrics of a single movement is often modulated by expected reward in various cortical and subcortical areas (Watanabe, 1996;Kawagoe et al, 1998;Leon and Shadlen, 1999;Gdowski et al, 2001;Kobayashi et al, 2002;Ikeda and Hikosaka, 2003;Roesch and Olson, 2003). Whereas most of these studies have examined how neural activity is influenced by expected rewards in a delayed response task, the activity of neurons in the prefrontal cortex (Barraclough et al, 2004) and posterior parietal cortex (Platt and Glimcher, 1999) is also modulated by the expected value of the reward during a free-choice task.…”
Section: Neural Signals Related To Ordinal Position and Reward Expectmentioning
confidence: 99%