A brain-wide map of neural activity during complex behaviour.

阅读:4
作者:Angelaki Dora, Benson Brandon, Benson Julius, Birman Daniel, Bonacchi Niccolò, Bougrova Kcénia, Bruijns Sebastian A, Carandini Matteo, Catarino Joana A, Chapuis Gaelle A, Churchland Anne K, Dan Yang, Davatolhagh Felicia, Dayan Peter, DeWitt Eric Ej, Engel Tatiana A, Fabbri Michele, Faulkner Mayo, Fiete Ila Rani, Findling Charles, Freitas-Silva Laura, Gerçek Berk, Harris Kenneth D, Häusser Michael, Hofer Sonja B, Hu Fei, Hubert Félix, Huntenburg Julia M, Khanal Anup, Krasniak Christopher S, Langdon Christopher, Langfield Christopher, Lau Petrina Y P, Mainen Zachary F, Meijer Guido T, Miska Nathaniel J, Mrsic-Flogel Thomas D, Noel Jean-Paul, Nylund Kai, Pan-Vazquez Alejandro, Paninski Liam, Pouget Alexandre, Rossant Cyrille, Roth Noam, Schaeffer Rylan, Schartner Michael, Shi Yanliang, Socha Karolina Z, Steinmetz Nicholas A, Svoboda Karel, Urai Anne E, Wells Miles J, West Steven J, Whiteway Matthew R, Winter Olivier, Witten Ilana B
A key challenge in neuroscience is understanding how neurons in hundreds of interconnected brain regions integrate sensory inputs with previous expectations to initiate movements and make decisions(1). It is difficult to meet this challenge if different laboratories apply different analyses to different recordings in different regions during different behaviours. Here we report a comprehensive set of recordings from 621,733 neurons recorded with 699 Neuropixels probes across 139 mice in 12 laboratories. The data were obtained from mice performing a decision-making task with sensory, motor and cognitive components. The probes covered 279 brain areas in the left forebrain and midbrain and the right hindbrain and cerebellum. We provide an initial appraisal of this brain-wide map and assess how neural activity encodes key task variables. Representations of visual stimuli transiently appeared in classical visual areas after stimulus onset and then spread to ramp-like activity in a collection of midbrain and hindbrain regions that also encoded choices. Neural responses correlated with impending motor action almost everywhere in the brain. Responses to reward delivery and consumption were also widespread. This publicly available dataset represents a resource for understanding how computations distributed across and within brain areas drive behaviour.

特别声明

1、本文转载旨在传播信息,不代表本网站观点,亦不对其内容的真实性承担责任。

2、其他媒体、网站或个人若从本网站转载使用,必须保留本网站注明的“来源”,并自行承担包括版权在内的相关法律责任。

3、如作者不希望本文被转载,或需洽谈转载稿费等事宜,请及时与本网站联系。

4、此外,如需投稿,也可通过邮箱info@biocloudy.com与我们取得联系。