Abstract

Purkinje cell (PC) discharge, the only output of cerebellar cortex, involves 2 types of action potentials, high-frequency simple spikes (SSs) and low-frequency complex spikes (CSs). While there is consensus that SSs convey information needed to optimize movement kinematics, the function of CSs, determined by the PC’s climbing fiber input, remains controversial. While initially thought to be specialized in reporting information on motor error for the subsequent amendment of behavior, CSs seem to contribute to other aspects of motor behavior as well. When faced with the bewildering diversity of findings and views unraveled by highly specific tasks, one may wonder if there is just one true function with all the other attributions wrong? Or is the diversity of findings a reflection of distinct pools of PCs, each processing specific streams of information conveyed by climbing fibers? With these questions in mind, we recorded CSs from the monkey oculomotor vermis deploying a repetitive saccade task that entailed sizable motor errors as well as small amplitude saccades, correcting them. We demonstrate that, in addition to carrying error-related information, CSs carry information on the metrics of both primary and small corrective saccades in a time-specific manner, with changes in CS firing probability coupled with changes in CS duration. Furthermore, we also found CS activity that seemed to predict the upcoming events. Hence PCs receive a multiplexed climbing fiber input that merges complementary streams of information on the behavior, separable by the recipient PC because they are staggered in time.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to investigate if complex spikes (CSs) are capable of carrying different streams of behaviorally relevant information in a multiplexed manner

  • By scrutinizing whether complex spikes (CSs) responses evoked in a demanding saccade paradigm causing cognitive fatigue are related to different events, we were able to demonstrate that many seemingly “spontaneously firing” CSs transport information on several behaviorally relevant parameters

  • When aligning the CS discharge to primary saccades, we observed a strong and temporally precise accumulation of CSs within a 100-ms period starting precisely at the end of saccades. This strong modulation was clearest for saccades made in 1 of 2 horizontal directions, specific to the respective Purkinje cell (PC)

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Summary

Objectives

The purpose of this study was to investigate if CSs are capable of carrying different streams of behaviorally relevant information in a multiplexed manner

Methods
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