Neuron
Volume 93, Issue 3, 8 February 2017, Pages 491-507
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Cracking the Neural Code for Sensory Perception by Combining Statistics, Intervention, and Behavior

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2016.12.036Get rights and content
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The two basic processes underlying perceptual decisions—how neural responses encode stimuli, and how they inform behavioral choices—have mainly been studied separately. Thus, although many spatiotemporal features of neural population activity, or “neural codes,” have been shown to carry sensory information, it is often unknown whether the brain uses these features for perception. To address this issue, we propose a new framework centered on redefining the neural code as the neural features that carry sensory information used by the animal to drive appropriate behavior; that is, the features that have an intersection between sensory and choice information. We show how this framework leads to a new statistical analysis of neural activity recorded during behavior that can identify such neural codes, and we discuss how to combine intersection-based analysis of neural recordings with intervention on neural activity to determine definitively whether specific neural activity features are involved in a task.

Keywords

neural coding
choice
information
optogenetics
population coding
behavior

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