AUTHOR=Neromyliotis Eleftherios , Moschovakis A. K. TITLE=Response Properties of Motor Equivalence Neurons of the Primate Premotor Cortex JOURNAL=Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience VOLUME=11 YEAR=2017 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/behavioral-neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00061 DOI=10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00061 ISSN=1662-5153 ABSTRACT=

To study the response properties of cells that could participate in eye-hand coordination we trained two macaque monkeys to perform center-out saccades and pointing movements with their right or left forelimb toward visual targets presented on a video display. We analyzed the phasic movement related discharges of neurons of the periarcuate cortex that fire before and during saccades and movements of the hand whether accompanied by movements of the other effector or not. Because such cells could encode an abstract form of the desired displacement vector without regard to the effector that would execute the movement we refer to such cells as motor equivalence neurons (Meq). Most of them (75%) were found in or near the smooth pursuit region and the grasp related region in the caudal bank of the arcuate sulcus. The onset of their phasic discharges preceded saccades by about 70 ms and hand movements by about 150 ms and was often correlated to both the onset of saccades and the onset of hand movements. The on-direction of Meq cells was uniformly distributed without preference for ipsiversive or contraversive movements. In about half of the Meq cells the preferred direction for saccades was the preferred direction for hand movements as well. In the remaining cells the difference was considerable (>90 deg), and the on-direction for eye-hand movements resembled that for isolated saccades in some cells and for isolated hand movements in others. A three layer neural network model that used Meq cells as its input layer showed that the combination of effector invariant discharges with non-invariant discharges could help reduce the number of decoding errors when the network attempts to compute the correct movement metrics of the right effector.