Extended Data Fig. 5: Striatal activity during trials with ipsilateral stimuli and ipsilaterally orienting movements. | Nature

Extended Data Fig. 5: Striatal activity during trials with ipsilateral stimuli and ipsilaterally orienting movements.

From: Striatal activity topographically reflects cortical activity

Extended Data Fig. 5: Striatal activity during trials with ipsilateral stimuli and ipsilaterally orienting movements.The alternative text for this image may have been generated using AI.

a, Activity for each striatal domain across all trials from all sessions with ipsilateral stimuli, ipsilaterally orienting movements and rewards, formatted as in Fig. 3a. Trials are sorted vertically by reaction time. Blue line, stimulus onset; orange curve, movement onset; yellow line, ‘go’ cue. Activity within each time point is smoothed with a running average of 100 trials to display across-trial trends. b, Prediction of activity in each striatal domain by summing kernels for task events, formatted as in Fig. 3c. c, Prediction of striatal activity from cortical activity, formatted as in Fig. 3d. d, Trial-averaged activity in each striatal domain (black), predicted from task events (blue), and predicted from cortical activity (green), aligned to stimulus (blue line), movement (orange line) and reward (cyan line) (mean ± s.e. across sessions), formatted as in Fig. 3e.

Back to article page