Title :
The parabigeminal nucleus as a recursive estimator
Author :
Ma, Rui ; Coleman, Todd ; Malpeli, Joseph
Author_Institution :
Coordinated Sci. Lab., Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA
Abstract :
The parabigeminal nucleus (PBN) is known to estimate the retinal position error (RPE) of an intended target. Recently it has been discovered that PBN activity continues to encode the extrapolated RPE of a ¿virtual¿ target, although less vigorously as compared with an actual target. Besides target movement, PBN activity also responds to eye movements generated by the animal itself that change the RPE of the virtual target. These phenomena imply the existence of an internal model within the PBN. We hypothesize that PBN performs recursive estimation akin to a Kalman filter, and manifests the characteristics of the computation in its spiking activities. This hypothesis is tested with a point process generalized linear model (GLM) of the PBN spike train. The results suggest the hypothesis is viable, and attribute the origination of PBN´s less vigorous responses to virtual target to the uncertainty of the estimation. Furthermore, this study provides a generalizable means for the neural computations that are essential for proper control of behavior and decision making to be embodied in spike train data.
Keywords :
Kalman filters; extrapolation; eye; neurophysiology; recursive estimation; visual perception; Kalman filter; PBN activity; PBN spike train; behavior control; decision making; extrapolated RPE; neural computation; parabigeminal nucleus; point process generalized linear model; recursive estimator; retinal position error; virtual target; Animals; Autocorrelation; Automatic testing; Decision making; Nervous system; Predictive models; Recursive estimation; Retina; System testing; Uncertainty;
Conference_Titel :
Decision and Control, 2009 held jointly with the 2009 28th Chinese Control Conference. CDC/CCC 2009. Proceedings of the 48th IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location :
Shanghai
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3871-6
Electronic_ISBN :
0191-2216
DOI :
10.1109/CDC.2009.5399914