Rapid, systematic updating of movement by accumulated decision evidence

Author

Molano-Mazón, M.

Garcia-Duran, A.

Pastor-Ciurana, J.

Hernández-Navarro, L.

Bektic, L.

Lombardo, D.

de la Rocha, J.

Hyafil, A.

Publication date

2024-12-04



Abstract

Acting in the natural world requires not only deciding among multiple options but also converting decisions into motor commands. How the dynamics of decision formation influence the fine kinematics of response movement remains, however, poorly understood. Here we investigate how the accumulation of decision evidence shapes the response orienting trajectories in a task where freely-moving rats combine prior expectations and auditory information to select between two possible options. Response trajectories and their motor vigor are initially determined by the prior. Rats movements then incorporate sensory information in less than 100 ms after stimulus onset by accelerating or slowing depending on how much the stimulus supports their initial choice. When the stimulus evidence is in strong contradiction, rats change their mind and reverse their initial trajectory. Human subjects performing an equivalent task display a remarkably similar behavior. We encapsulate these results in a computational model that maps the decision variable onto the movement kinematics at discrete time points, capturing subjects' choices, trajectories and changes of mind. Our results show that motor responses are not ballistic. Instead, they are systematically and rapidly updated, as they smoothly unfold over time, by the parallel dynamics of the underlying decision process.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Subject

Neuroscience

Pages

19 p.

Publisher

Nature Research

Version of

Nature Communications

Documents

Rapid systematic updating of movement by accumulated decision evidence.pdf

4.908Mb

 

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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CRM Articles [656]