Litcius/Paper detail

Neural Signals in Red Nucleus during Reactive and Proactive Adjustments in Behavior

Adam T. Brockett, Nicholas Hricz, Stephen S. Tennyson, Daniel W. Bryden, Matthew R. Roesch

2020Journal of Neuroscience32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The ability to adjust behavior is an essential component of cognitive control. Much is known about frontal and striatal processes that support cognitive control, but few studies have investigated how motor signals change during reactive and proactive adjustments in motor output. To address this, we characterized neural signals in red nucleus (RN), a brain region linked to motor control, as male and female rats performed a novel variant of the stop-signal task. We found that activity in RN represented the direction of movement and was strongly correlated with movement speed. Additionally, we found that directional movement signals were amplified on STOP trials before completion of the response and that the strength of RN signals was modulated when rats exhibited cognitive control. These results provide the first evidence that neural signals in RN integrate cognitive control signals to reshape motor outcomes reactively within trials and proactivity across them.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroscienceCognitionPsychologyMotor controlControl (management)ProactivityTask (project management)NucleusCognitive psychologyComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceSocial psychologyEngineeringSystems engineeringMemory and Neural MechanismsNeural dynamics and brain functionNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research