4.7 Article

Trial-by-Trial Motor Cortical Correlates of a Rapidly Adapting Visuomotor Internal Model

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 7, Pages 1721-1732

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1091-16.2016

Keywords

brain-machine interface; internal models; motor control; non-human primate

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [IGERT 0734683]
  2. Christopher and Dana Reeve Paralysis Foundation
  3. Burroughs Welcome Fund Career Awards in the Biomedical Sciences
  4. Simons Foundation
  5. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Reorganization and Plasticity to Accelerate Injury Recovery [N66001-10-C-2010]
  6. National Institutes of Health (NIH) Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Transformative Research Award [R01NS076460]
  7. NIH Director's Pioneer Award [8DP1HD075623-04]
  8. NIH Director's Transformative Research Award (TR01) from the National Institute of Mental Health Grant [5R01MH09964703]
  9. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency NeuroFAST award from BTO [W911NF-14-2-0013]

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Accurate motor control is mediated by internal models of how neural activity generates movement. We examined neural correlates of an adapting internal model of visuomotor gain in motor cortex while two macaques performed a reaching task in which the gain scaling between the hand and a presented cursor was varied. Previous studies of cortical changes during visuomotor adaptation focused on preparatory and perimovement epochs and analyzed trial-averaged neural data. Here, we recorded simultaneous neural population activity using multielectrode arrays and focused our analysis on neural differences in the period before the target appeared. We found that we could estimate the monkey's internal model of the gain using the neural population state during this pretarget epoch. This neural correlate depended on the gain experienced during recent trials and it predicted the speed of the subsequent reach. To explore the utility of this internal model estimate for brain-machine interfaces, we performed an offline analysis showing that it can be used to compensate for upcoming reach extent errors. Together, these results demonstrate that pretarget neural activity in motor cortex reflects the monkey's internal model of visuomotor gain on single trials and can potentially be used to improve neural prostheses.

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