Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, SAPIENZA University of Rome, 00185 Rome, Italy.
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, SAPIENZA University of Rome, 00185 Rome, Italy
J Neurosci. 2019 May 1;39(18):3514-3528. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1512-18.2019. Epub 2019 Feb 25.
Daily life often requires the coordination of our actions with those of another partner. After 50 years (1968-2018) of behavioral neurophysiology of motor control, the neural mechanisms that allow such coordination in primates are unknown. We studied this issue by recording cell activity simultaneously from dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) of two male interacting monkeys trained to coordinate their hand forces to achieve a common goal. We found a population of "joint-action cells" that discharged preferentially when monkeys cooperated in the task. This modulation was predictive in nature, because in most cells neural activity led in time the changes of the "own" and of the "other" behavior. These neurons encoded the joint-performance more accurately than "canonical action-related cells", activated by the action per se, regardless of the individual versus interactive context. A decoding of joint-action was obtained by combining the two brains' activities, using cells with directional properties distinguished from those associated to the "solo" behaviors. Action observation-related activity studied when one monkey observed the consequences of the partner's behavior, i.e., the cursor's motion on the screen, did not sharpen the accuracy of joint-action cells' representation, suggesting that it plays no major role in encoding joint-action. When monkeys performed with a non-interactive partner, such as a computer, joint-action cells' representation of the other (non-cooperative) behavior was significantly degraded. These findings provide evidence of how premotor neurons integrate the time-varying representation of the self-action with that of a co-actor, thus offering a neural substrate for successful visuomotor coordination between individuals. The neural bases of intersubject motor coordination were studied by recording cell activity simultaneously from the frontal cortex of two interacting monkeys, trained to coordinate their hand forces to achieve a common goal. We found a new class of cells, preferentially active when the monkeys cooperated, rather than when the same action was performed individually. These "joint-action neurons" offered a neural representation of joint-behaviors by far more accurate than that provided by the "canonical action-related cells", modulated by the action per se regardless of the individual/interactive context. A neural representation of joint-performance was obtained by combining the activity recorded from the two brains. Our findings offer the first evidence concerning neural mechanisms subtending interactive visuomotor coordination between co-acting agents.
日常生活中经常需要协调我们自己的动作与另一个伙伴的动作。经过 50 年(1968-2018)的运动控制行为神经生理学研究,灵长类动物中允许这种协调的神经机制仍然未知。我们通过同时记录两只雄性相互作用的猴子的背侧运动前皮层(PMd)中的细胞活动来研究这个问题,这些猴子接受训练以协调他们的手部力量来实现共同的目标。我们发现了一群“联合动作细胞”,当猴子在任务中合作时,这些细胞会优先放电。这种调制是本质上是预测性的,因为在大多数细胞中,神经活动及时领先于“自己”和“他人”行为的变化。与本身由动作激活的“经典动作相关细胞”相比,这些神经元更准确地编码了联合表现,无论个体与互动环境如何。通过使用与“独奏”行为相关的细胞区分的具有方向特性的细胞,将两个大脑的活动结合起来,可以实现对联合动作的解码。当一只猴子观察到伙伴行为的后果(即光标在屏幕上的运动)时,研究了与动作观察相关的活动,但并没有提高联合动作细胞表示的准确性,这表明它在编码联合动作方面没有起到主要作用。当猴子与非互动伙伴(例如计算机)一起执行任务时,其他(非合作)行为的联合动作细胞表示明显退化。这些发现为运动前神经元如何整合自我动作的时变表示与共同作用者的表示提供了证据,从而为个体之间成功的视觉运动协调提供了神经基础。通过同时记录两只相互作用的猴子的前额皮层中的细胞活动来研究主体间运动协调的神经基础,这些猴子接受训练以协调他们的手部力量来实现共同的目标。我们发现了一类新的细胞,当猴子合作时,而不是当它们单独执行相同的动作时,这些细胞更活跃。这些“联合动作神经元”通过远远超过由动作本身调制的“经典动作相关细胞”提供的神经表示,提供了联合行为的神经表示,无论个体/互动背景如何。通过结合从两个大脑中记录的活动,可以获得联合表现的神经表示。我们的发现提供了关于合作代理之间交互视觉运动协调的神经机制的第一个证据。