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Publication : Purkinje cells translate subjective salience into readiness to act and choice performance.

First Author  Bina L Year  2021
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  37
Issue  11 Pages  110116
PubMed ID  34910904 Mgi Jnum  J:324663
Mgi Id  MGI:6881805 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2021.110116
Citation  Bina L, et al. (2021) Purkinje cells translate subjective salience into readiness to act and choice performance. Cell Rep 37(11):110116
abstractText  The brain selectively allocates attention from a continuous stream of sensory input. This process is typically attributed to computations in distinct regions of the forebrain and midbrain. Here, we explore whether cerebellar Purkinje cells encode information about the selection of sensory inputs and could thereby contribute to non-motor forms of learning. We show that complex spikes of individual Purkinje cells change the sensory modality they encode to reflect changes in the perceived salience of sensory input. Comparisons with mouse models deficient in cerebellar plasticity suggest that changes in complex spike activity instruct potentiation of Purkinje cells simple spike firing, which is required for efficient learning. Our findings suggest that during learning, climbing fibers do not directly guide motor output, but rather contribute to a general readiness to act via changes in simple spike activity, thereby bridging the sequence from non-motor to motor functions.
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