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J Neurophysiol (October 8, 2008). doi:10.1152/jn.90400.2008
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Submitted on March 25, 2008
Revised on October 6, 2008
Accepted on October 6, 2008

Encoding By Response Duration in the Basal Ganglia

Naama parush1*, David Arkadir2, Alon Nevet3, Genela Morris4, Naftali Tishby1, Israel Nelken1, and Hagai Bergman5

1 Hebrew University
2 Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School
3 The Hebrew University ?? Hadassah Medical School
4 The Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School
5 Hebrew Univ.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: naamap{at}alice.nc.huji.ac.il.

Several models have suggested that information transmission in the basal ganglia (BG) involves gating mechanisms, where neuronal activity modulates the extent of gate aperture and its duration. Here, we demonstrate that BG response duration is informative about a highly abstract stimulus feature, and show that the duration of 'gate opening' can indeed be used for information transmission through the BG. We analyzed recordings from three BG locations: the external part of the globus pallidus (GPe), the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr), and dopaminergic neurons from the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) during performance of a probabilistic visuo-motor task. Most (>85%) of the neurons showed significant rate modulation following the appearance of cues predicting future reward. Trial to Trial mutual information analysis revealed that response duration encoded reward prospects in many (42%) of the responsive SNr neurons, as well as in the SNc (26.9%), and the GPe (29.3%). While the low-frequency discharge SNc neurons only responded with an increase in firing rate, SNr and GPe neurons with high-frequency tonic discharge responded with both increases and decreases. Conversely, many duration-informative neurons in SNr (68%) and GPe (50%) responded with a decreased rather than an increased rate. The response duration was more informative than the extreme (minimal or maximal) amplitude or spike count in responsive bins of duration-informative neurons. Thus, response duration is not simply correlated with the discharge rate and can provide additional information to the target structures of the BG.







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