How Confident Do You Feel?

In this issue of Neuron, Fetsch et al. (2014) show that microstimulation of motion-sensitive neurons in the visual cortex (MT/MST) of primates mimics the addition of sensory information for which the stimulated neurons are selective. Such microstimulation increases the confidence that monkeys have i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuron (Cambridge, Mass.) Mass.), 2014-08, Vol.83 (4), p.751-753
Hauptverfasser: de Lafuente, Victor, Romo, Ranulfo
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Romo, Ranulfo
description In this issue of Neuron, Fetsch et al. (2014) show that microstimulation of motion-sensitive neurons in the visual cortex (MT/MST) of primates mimics the addition of sensory information for which the stimulated neurons are selective. Such microstimulation increases the confidence that monkeys have in their decisions about motion direction. In this issue of Neuron, Fetsch et al. (2014) show that microstimulation of motion-sensitive neurons in the visual cortex (MT/MST) of primates mimics the addition of sensory information for which the stimulated neurons are selective. Such microstimulation increases the confidence that monkeys have in their decisions about motion direction.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.neuron.2014.08.007
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subjects Animals
Behavior
Decision making
Decision Making - physiology
Experiments
Male
Motion Perception - physiology
Neurons
Primates
Visual Cortex - physiology
title How Confident Do You Feel?
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