Abstract

Animals can make faster behavioral responses to multisensory stimuli than to unisensory stimuli. The superior colliculus (SC), which receives multiple inputs from different sensory modalities, is considered to be involved in the initiation of motor responses. However, the mechanism by which multisensory information facilitates motor responses is not yet understood. Here, we demonstrate that multisensory information modulates competition among SC neurons to elicit faster responses. We conducted multiunit recordings from the SC of rats performing a two-alternative spatial discrimination task using auditory and/or visual stimuli. We found that a large population of SC neurons showed direction-selective activity before the onset of movement in response to the stimuli irrespective of stimulation modality. Trial-by-trial correlation analysis showed that the premovement activity of many SC neurons increased with faster reaction speed for the contraversive movement, whereas the premovement activity of another population of neurons decreased with faster reaction speed for the ipsiversive movement. When visual and auditory stimuli were presented simultaneously, the premovement activity of a population of neurons for the contraversive movement was enhanced, whereas the premovement activity of another population of neurons for the ipsiversive movement was depressed. Unilateral inactivation of SC using muscimol prolonged reaction times of contraversive movements, but it shortened those of ipsiversive movements. These findings suggest that the difference in activity between the SC hemispheres regulates the reaction speed of motor responses, and multisensory information enlarges the activity difference resulting in faster responses.

Highlights

  • The reaction time to multisensory stimuli is often shorter than that to unisensory stimuli

  • To examine how superior colliculus (SC) neurons contribute to the initiation of locomotion in response to sensory stimuli, perievent histograms and rasters were made for each unit, aligned to the stimulus onset for each stimulus

  • We examined the role of SC neurons in behavioral reaction to unisensory and multisensory stimuli

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Summary

Introduction

The reaction time to multisensory stimuli is often shorter than that to unisensory stimuli. Because the facilitation of reaction by multisensory stimuli occurs even when the upcoming stimulus is unpredictable (e.g., [1]), the facilitation could be attributed to changes in sensory-motor processing rather than to changes in the preparatory state of animals. We focused on how multisensory information modulates the sensory-motor processing in the superior colliculus (SC) to produce shorter reaction times. The SC plays a pivotal role in generating orientation movements of the eyes, head, and body in response to sensory stimuli [2]. Pharmacological inactivation and electrical stimulation experiments suggest that the competitive interaction in the SC restricts the reaction speed as well as the direction of a movement [15,16,17,18,19]

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