Stimulus dependent relationships between behavioral choice and sensory neural responses

Abstract

Understanding perceptual decision-making requires linking sensory neural responses to behavioral choices. In two-choice tasks, activity-choice covariations are commonly quantified with a single measure of choice probability (CP), without characterizing their changes across stimulus levels. We provide theoretical conditions for stimulus dependencies of activity-choice covariations. Assuming a general decision-threshold model, which comprises both feedforward and feedback processing and allows for a stimulus-modulated neural population covariance, we analytically predict a very general and previously unreported stimulus dependence of CPs. We develop new tools, including refined analyses of CPs and generalized linear models with stimulus-choice interactions, which accurately assess the stimulus- or choice-driven signals of each neuron, characterizing stimulus-dependent patterns of choice-related signals. With these tools, we analyze CPs of macaque MT neurons during a motion discrimination task. Our analysis provides preliminary empirical evidence for the promise of studying stimulus dependencies of choice-related signals, encouraging further assessment in wider data sets.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummere54858
ISSN2050-084X
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 07.04.2021
Extern publiziertJa

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

Funding Information:
1014 Acknowledgments : This work was supported by the BRA

Funding Information:
1016 program (grant R01 EY028811 to R.M.H). We thank K.H. Britten, W.T. Newsome, M.N. Shadlen, S.

Funding Information:
This work was supported by the BRAIN Initiative (grants No. R01 NS108410 and No. U19 NS107464 to S.P., U19 NS118246 to R.M.H.), the Fondation Bertarelli, and the CRCNS program (grant R01 EY028811 to R.M.H). We thank K.H. Britten, W.T. Newsome, M.N. Shadlen, S. Celebrini, and J.A. Movshon for making their data available in the Neural Signal Archive (http://www.neuralsig and W. Bair for maintaining this database.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, eLife Sciences Publications Ltd. All rights reserved.