Abstract
The sensorimotor striatum contributes to the normal execution of motor habits but the mechanisms underlying this function are largely unknown[1]. Motor habits are stereotyped sequences of movements learned through a long trial-and-error process, automatically triggered by a set of sensory cues and that tend to persist despite outcome degradation (e.g. reward omission). We found that rats running on a treadmill become proficient in a fixed time interval estimation task by developing a highly stereotyped locomotor routine. Consistently with the definition of habits, the routine was acquired slowly (at least 2 months of daily practice), and once learned, it persisted for several sessions when the rewarding outcome was omitted. We took advantage of this unexpected behavior and used tetrode arrays to record the spiking activity of dorsolateral striatal ensembles while rats perform the locomotor habit. We report sequential activations of striatal neurons during the entire execution of the task. Importantly, we found that the firing rate of a large fraction of neurons was either locked to the locomotor limb movements or correlated with the kinematics of the habit (running speed, acceleration, position and time). These results contrast with the long-standing view that striatum is mainly concerned with action selection[2]. Rather movements and task kinematics encoding suggest that the striatum continuously control the execution of habitual action. Additional experiments are currently being performed to further investigate this hypothesis.
Highlights
The sensorimotor striatum contributes to the normal execution of motor habits but the mechanisms underlying this function are largely unknown[1]
Motor habits are stereotyped sequences of movements learned through a long trial-and-error process, automatically triggered by a set of sensory cues and that tend to persist despite outcome degradation
We found that rats running on a treadmill become proficient in a fixed time interval estimation task by developing a highly stereotyped locomotor routine
Summary
The sensorimotor striatum contributes to the normal execution of motor habits but the mechanisms underlying this function are largely unknown[1]. Motor habits are stereotyped sequences of movements learned through a long trial-and-error process, automatically triggered by a set of sensory cues and that tend to persist despite outcome degradation (e.g. reward omission).
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