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Cerebellar complex spikes encode both destinations and errors in arm movements

Shigeru Kitazawa (), Tatsuya Kimura and Ping-Bo Yin
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Shigeru Kitazawa: Electrotechnical Laboratory, Japan Science and Technology Corporation
Tatsuya Kimura: Electrotechnical Laboratory, Japan Science and Technology Corporation
Ping-Bo Yin: CREST, Japan Science and Technology Corporation

Nature, 1998, vol. 392, issue 6675, 494-497

Abstract: Abstract Purkinje cells of the cerebellum discharge complex spikes, named after the complexity of their waveforms1, with a frequency of ∼1 Hz during arm movements1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13. Despite the low frequency of firing, complex spikes have been proposed to contribute to the initiation of arm movements2,7,8,9,10 or to the gradual improvement of motor skills2,4,5,6,14,15,16. Here we recorded the activity of Purkinje cells fromthe hemisphere of cerebellar lobules IV–VI while trained monkeys made short-lasting reaching movements (of ∼200 milliseconds in duration) to touch a visual target that appeared at a random location on a tangent screen. We examined the relationship between complex-spike discharges and the absolute touch position, and between complex-spike discharges and relative errors in touching the screen. We used information theory to show that the complex spikes occurring at the beginning of the reach movement encode the absolute destination of the reach, and the complex spikes occurring at the end of the short-lasting movements encode the relative errors. Thus, complex spikes convey multiple types of information, consistent with the idea that they contribute both to the generation of movements and to the gradual, long-term improvement of these movements.

Date: 1998
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DOI: 10.1038/33141

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