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Spontaneous behaviors drive multidimensional, brainwide activity
Author(s) -
Carsen Stringer,
Marius Pachitariu,
Nicholas A. Steinmetz,
Charu Bai Reddy,
Matteo Carandini,
Kenneth D. Harris
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.aav7893
Subject(s) - neuroscience , premovement neuronal activity , optogenetics , psychology , licking , brain activity and meditation , amygdala , thirst , visual cortex , neuron , arousal , photostimulation , biology , electroencephalography , pharmacology , endocrinology
Neuronal populations in sensory cortex produce variable responses to sensory stimuli and exhibit intricate spontaneous activity even without external sensory input. Cortical variability and spontaneous activity have been variously proposed to represent random noise, recall of prior experience, or encoding of ongoing behavioral and cognitive variables. Recording more than 10,000 neurons in mouse visual cortex, we observed that spontaneous activity reliably encoded a high-dimensional latent state, which was partially related to the mouse's ongoing behavior and was represented not just in visual cortex but also across the forebrain. Sensory inputs did not interrupt this ongoing signal but added onto it a representation of external stimuli in orthogonal dimensions. Thus, visual cortical population activity, despite its apparently noisy structure, reliably encodes an orthogonal fusion of sensory and multidimensional behavioral information.

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