Musculoskeletal geometry accounts for apparent extrinsic representation of paw position in dorsal spinocerebellar tract

We examined the contribution of musculoskeletal geometry to this apparent extrinsic representation by simulating a three-joint hindlimb with mono- and biarticular muscles, each providing a muscle spindlelike signal, modulated by the muscle length. We simulated neurons driven by randomly weighted combinations of these signals and moved the paw to different positions under two joint-covariance conditions similar to the original experiments. Our results paralleled those experiments in a number of respects: 1) Many neurons were tuned to paw position relative to the hip under both conditions. 2) The distribution of tuning was strongly bimodal, with most neurons driven by whole-leg flexion or extension. 3) The change in tuning between conditions clustered around zero (median absolute change ~20°). These results indicate that, at least for these constraint conditions, extrinsic-like representation can be achieved simply through musculoskeletal geometry and convergent muscle length inputs. Consequently, they suggest a reinterpretation of the earlier results may be required. NEW & NOTEWORTHY A classic experiment concluding that many dorsal spinocerebellar tract neurons encode paw position rather than joint angles has been cited by many studies as evidence for high-level computation occurring within a single synapse of the sensors. However, our study provides evidence that such a computation is not required to explain the results. Using simulation, we replicated many of the ori...
Source: Journal of Neurophysiology - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Research Articles Source Type: research
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