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research article

Redundant information encoding in primary motor cortex during natural and prosthetic motor control

So, Kelvin
•
Ganguly, Karunesh
•
Jimenez, Jessica
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2012
Journal of Computational Neuroscience

Redundant encoding of information facilitates reliable distributed information processing. To explore this hypothesis in the motor system, we applied concepts from information theory to quantify the redundancy of movement-related information encoded in the macaque primary motor cortex (M1) during natural and neuroprosthetic control. Two macaque monkeys were trained to perform a delay center-out reaching task controlling a computer cursor under natural arm movement (manual control, ‘MC’), and using a brain-machine interface (BMI) via volitional control of neural ensemble activity (brain control, ‘BC’). During MC, we found neurons in contralateral M1 to contain higher and more redundant information about target direction than ipsilateral M1 neurons, consistent with the laterality of movement control. During BC, we found that the M1 neurons directly incorporated into the BMI (‘direct’ neurons) contained the highest and most redundant target information compared to neurons that were not incorporated into the BMI (‘indirect’ neurons). This effect was even more significant when comparing to M1 neurons of the opposite hemisphere. Interestingly, when we retrained the BMI to use ipsilateral M1 activity, we found that these neurons were more redundant and contained higher information than contralateral M1 neurons, even though ensembles from this hemisphere were previously less redundant during natural arm movement. These results indicate that ensembles most associated to movement contain highest redundancy and information encoding, which suggests a role for redundancy in proficient natural and prosthetic motor control.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1007/s10827-011-0369-1
Web of Science ID

WOS:000303589500011

Author(s)
So, Kelvin
Ganguly, Karunesh
Jimenez, Jessica
Gastpar, Michael C.  
Carmena, Jose M.
Date Issued

2012

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Published in
Journal of Computational Neuroscience
Volume

32

Issue

3

Start page

555

End page

561

Subjects

Mutual information – Neural ensemble – Motor control – Brain-machine interface – Electrophysiology – Primary motor cortex

Editorial or Peer reviewed

NON-REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LINX  
Available on Infoscience
May 11, 2012
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/80289
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