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J Neurophysiol 91: 2628-2648, 2004. First published February 4, 2004; doi:10.1152/jn.01221.2003
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Contextual Modulation of Central Thalamic Delay-Period Activity: Representation of Visual and Saccadic Goals

Melanie T. Wyder1, Dino P. Massoglia2 and Terrence R. Stanford1,2

1Program in Neuroscience and 2Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston Salem, North Carolina 27157

Submitted 16 December 2003; accepted in final form 31 January 2004

This study examines the influence of behavioral context on the activity of visuomotor neurons in primate central thalamus. Neurons that combine information about sensory stimuli and their behavioral relevance are thought to contribute to the decision mechanisms that link specific stimuli to specific responses. We reported in a previous study that neurons in central thalamus carry spatial information throughout the instructed delay period of a visually guided delayed saccade task. The goal of the current study was to determine whether the delay-period activity of thalamic neurons is modulated by behavioral context. Single neurons were evaluated during performance of visually guided and memory-guided variants of a saccadic choice task in which a cue designated the response field stimulus as the target of a rewarded saccade or as an irrelevant distracter. The relative influence of the physical stimulus and context on delay-period activity suggested a minimum of 3 neural groups. Some neurons signaled the locations of visible stimuli regardless of behavioral relevance. Other neurons preferentially signaled the locations of current saccadic goals and did so even in the absence of the physical stimulus. A third group signaled only the locations of currently visible saccadic goals. For the latter 2 groups, activity was the product of both stimulus and context, suggesting that central thalamic neurons play a role in the context-dependent linkage of sensory signals and saccadic commands. More generally, these data suggest that the anatomical substrate of sensorimotor decision making may include the cortico-subcortical loops for which central thalamus serves as the penultimate synapse.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: T. R. Stanford, Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston Salem, NC 27157 (E-mail: stanford{at}wfubmc.edu).




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