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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 2, 2003, 23(13):5750-5761
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Propagation of Correlated Activity through Multiple Stages of a Neural Circuit
Rhea R. Kimpo,1
Frederic E. Theunissen,2 and
Allison J. Doupe1
1Departments of Physiology and Psychiatry and
Keck Center for Integrative Neuroscience, University of California, San
Francisco, California 94143-0444, and 2Department of
Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
The timing of spikes can carry information, for instance, when the temporal
pattern of firing across neurons results in correlated activity. However, in
part because central synapses are unreliable, correlated activity has not been
observed to propagate through multiple subsequent stages in neural circuits,
although such propagation has frequently been used in theoretical models.
Using simultaneous single-unit and multiunit recordings from two or three
vocal control nuclei of songbirds, measurement of coherency and time delays,
and manipulation of neural activity, we provide evidence here for preserved
correlation of activity through multiple steps of the neural circuit for song,
including a basal ganglia circuit and its target vocal motor pathway. This
suggests that these pathways contain highly functionally interconnected
neurons and represent a neural architecture that can preserve information
about the timing of firing of groups of neurons. Because the interaction of
these song pathways is critical to vocal learning, the preserved correlation
of activity may be important to the learning and production of sequenced motor
acts and could be a general feature of basal gangliacortical
interaction.
Key words: basal ganglia; birdsong; coherency; cross-correlation; functional connectivity; neuronal interaction; LMAN; RA; zebra finch
Received Dec. 13, 2002;
revised Apr. 7, 2003;
accepted Apr. 8, 2003.
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