(July 19, 2012) By decoding brain
activity, scientists were able to “see” that two monkeys were planning to
approach the same reaching task differently — even before they moved a muscle.
Anyone who has looked at the
jagged recording of the electrical activity of a single neuron in the brain
must have wondered how any useful information could be extracted from such a
frazzled signal.
But over the past 30 years,
researchers have discovered that clear information can be obtained by decoding
the activity of large populations of neurons.
Now, scientists at Washington
University in St. Louis, who were decoding brain activity while monkeys reached
around an obstacle to touch a target, have come up with two remarkable results.
Their first result was one they
had designed their experiment to achieve: they demonstrated that multiple
parameters can be embedded in the firing rate of a single neuron and that
certain types of parameters are encoded only if they are needed to solve the
task at hand.
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