TY - JOUR
T1 - Neuronal activity preceding directional and nondirectional cues in the premotor cortex of rhesus monkeys
AU - Vaadia, Eilon
AU - Kurata, Kiyoshi
AU - Wise, Steven P.
PY - 1988
Y1 - 1988
N2 - Pre-cue activity, the neuronal modulation that precedes a predictable stimulus, was studied in the premotor cortex of three rhesus monkeys. In one condition, a directional cue dictated the timing and target of a forelimb movement. In another condition, a non-directional cue provided identical timing information but did not indicate the target. Of 501 task-related neurons recorded in premotor cortex, 168 showed pre-cue activity. The onset time of pre-cue activity varied markedly from trial to trial and cell to cell, ranging from trial initiation to 4.8 sec later. No pre-cue activity reflected the direction of limb movement; thus, the data argue against the hypothesis that pre-cue activity reflects preparation for specific limb movements. A small number of cells showed greater pre-cue activity before directional than before nondirectional cues, and this difference may reflect anticipation of the cue's directional information. However, the vast majority (84% of neurons lacked such differences. We therefore hypothesize that most pre-cue activity reflects or contributes to a facet of behavior common to the two conditions: anticipation of the time and/or nature of events.
AB - Pre-cue activity, the neuronal modulation that precedes a predictable stimulus, was studied in the premotor cortex of three rhesus monkeys. In one condition, a directional cue dictated the timing and target of a forelimb movement. In another condition, a non-directional cue provided identical timing information but did not indicate the target. Of 501 task-related neurons recorded in premotor cortex, 168 showed pre-cue activity. The onset time of pre-cue activity varied markedly from trial to trial and cell to cell, ranging from trial initiation to 4.8 sec later. No pre-cue activity reflected the direction of limb movement; thus, the data argue against the hypothesis that pre-cue activity reflects preparation for specific limb movements. A small number of cells showed greater pre-cue activity before directional than before nondirectional cues, and this difference may reflect anticipation of the cue's directional information. However, the vast majority (84% of neurons lacked such differences. We therefore hypothesize that most pre-cue activity reflects or contributes to a facet of behavior common to the two conditions: anticipation of the time and/or nature of events.
KW - Frontal cortex
KW - Motor cortex
KW - Premotor cortex
KW - Set
KW - Timing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0024152076&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3109/08990228809144674
DO - 10.3109/08990228809144674
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C2 - 3242346
AN - SCOPUS:0024152076
SN - 0899-0220
VL - 6
SP - 207
EP - 230
JO - Somatosensory and Motor Research
JF - Somatosensory and Motor Research
IS - 2
ER -