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Cerebellar output shapes cortical preparatory activity during motor adaptation

Author

Listed:
  • Sharon Israely

    (The Hebrew University)

  • Hugo Ninou

    (The Hebrew University
    PSL University
    PSL University)

  • Ori Rajchert

    (Technion - Israel Institute of Technology)

  • Lee Elmaleh

    (The Hebrew University)

  • Ran Harel

    (Sheba Medical Center)

  • Firas Mawase

    (Technion - Israel Institute of Technology)

  • Jonathan Kadmon

    (The Hebrew University)

  • Yifat Prut

    (The Hebrew University)

Abstract

The cerebellum plays a key role in motor adaptation by driving trial-to-trial recalibration of movements based on previous errors. In primates, cortical correlates of adaptation are encoded already in the pre-movement motor plan, but these early cortical signals could be driven by a cerebellar-to-cortical information flow or evolve independently through intracortical mechanisms. To address this question, we trained female macaque monkeys to reach against a viscous force field (FF) while blocking cerebellar outflow. The cerebellar block led to impaired FF adaptation and a compensatory, re-aiming-like shift in motor cortical preparatory activity. In the null-field conditions, the cerebellar block altered neural preparatory activity by increasing task-representation dimensionality and impeding generalization. A computational model indicated that low-dimensional (cerebellar-like) feedback is sufficient to replicate these findings. We conclude that cerebellar signals carry task structure information that constrains the dimensionality of the cortical preparatory manifold and promotes generalization. In the absence of these signals, cortical mechanisms are harnessed to partially restore adaptation.

Suggested Citation

  • Sharon Israely & Hugo Ninou & Ori Rajchert & Lee Elmaleh & Ran Harel & Firas Mawase & Jonathan Kadmon & Yifat Prut, 2025. "Cerebellar output shapes cortical preparatory activity during motor adaptation," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-16, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-57832-4
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-57832-4
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