Abstract
During sensory-guided motor tasks, information must be transferred from arrays of neurons coding target location to motor networks that generate and control movement. We address two basic questions about this information transfer. First, what mechanisms assure that the different neural representations align properly so that activity in the sensory network representing target location evokes a motor response generating accurate movement toward the target? Coordinate transformations may be needed to put the sensory data into a form appropriate for use by the motor system. For example, in visually guided reaching the location of a target relative to the body is determined by a combination of the position of its image on the retina and the direction of gaze. What assures that the motor network responds to the appropriate combination of sensory inputs corresponding to target position in body- or arm-centered coordinates? To answer these questions, we model a sensory network coding target position and use it to drive a similarly modeled motor network. To determine the actual motor response we use decoding methods that have been developed and verified in experimental work. We derive a general set of conditions on the sensory-to-motor synaptic connections that assure a properly aligned and transformed response. The accuracy of the response for different numbers of coding cells is computed. We show that development of the synaptic weights needed to generate the correct motor response can occur spontaneously through the observation of random movements and correlation-based synaptic modification. No error signal or external teaching is needed during this process. We also discuss nonlinear coordinate transformations and the presence of both shifting and nonshifting receptive fields in sensory/motor systems.