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Shared Cortex-Cerebellum Dynamics in the Execution and Learning of a Motor Task
Author(s) -
Mark J. Wagner,
Tony Hyun Kim,
Jonathan Kadmon,
Nghia D. Nguyen,
Surya Ganguli,
Mark J. Schnitzer,
Liqun Luo
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2019.02.019
Subject(s) - cerebellum , neuroscience , biology , neocortex , motor learning , forelimb , pontine nuclei , macaque , cerebellar cortex , motor coordination , premotor cortex , anatomy , dorsum
Throughout mammalian neocortex, layer 5 pyramidal (L5) cells project via the pons to a vast number of cerebellar granule cells (GrCs), forming a fundamental pathway. Yet, it is unknown how neuronal dynamics are transformed through the L5→GrC pathway. Here, by directly comparing premotor L5 and GrC activity during a forelimb movement task using dual-site two-photon Ca 2+ imaging, we found that in expert mice, L5 and GrC dynamics were highly similar. L5 cells and GrCs shared a common set of task-encoding activity patterns, possessed similar diversity of responses, and exhibited high correlations comparable to local correlations among L5 cells. Chronic imaging revealed that these dynamics co-emerged in cortex and cerebellum over learning: as behavioral performance improved, initially dissimilar L5 cells and GrCs converged onto a shared, low-dimensional, task-encoding set of neural activity patterns. Thus, a key function of cortico-cerebellar communication is the propagation of shared dynamics that emerge during learning.

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