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Canceling actions involves a race between basal ganglia pathways

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TLDR
The results support race models of action cancellation, with stopping requiring Stop-cue information to be transmitted from STN to SNr before increased striatal input creates a point of no return.
Abstract
Salient cues can prompt the rapid interruption of planned actions. It has been proposed that fast, reactive behavioral inhibition involves specific basal ganglia pathways, and we tested this by comparing activity in multiple rat basal ganglia structures during performance of a stop-signal task. Subthalamic nucleus (STN) neurons exhibited low-latency responses to 'Stop' cues, irrespective of whether actions were canceled or not. By contrast, neurons downstream in the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr) only responded to Stop cues in trials with successful cancellation. Recordings and simulations together indicate that this sensorimotor gating arises from the relative timing of two distinct inputs to neurons in the SNr dorsolateral 'core' subregion: cue-related excitation from STN and movement-related inhibition from striatum. Our results support race models of action cancellation, with stopping requiring Stop-cue information to be transmitted from STN to SNr before increased striatal input creates a point of no return.

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Inhibition and the right inferior frontal cortex: one decade on.

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Mesolimbic dopamine signals the value of work

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A fronto–striato–subthalamic–pallidal network for goal-directed and habitual inhibition

TL;DR: It is suggested that imbalance between goal-directed and habitual action and inhibition contributes to some manifestations of Parkinson's disease, Tourette syndrome and obsessive–compulsive disorder and is proposed that basal ganglia surgery improves these disorders by restoring a functional balance between facilitation and inhibition.
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Control of basal ganglia output by direct and indirect pathway projection neurons.

TL;DR: The results support the theory that key basal ganglia output neurons serve as an inhibitory gate over motor output that can be opened or closed by striatal direct and indirect pathways, respectively.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The point of no return in choice reaction time: controlled and ballistic stages of response preparation

TL;DR: Details are revealed about processes that so closely precede the initiation of movement that they cannot be inhibited and appear to be affected by the repetition of stimulus-response pairs, but not by the physical or semantic properties of the stimuli.
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Pedunculopontine Tegmental Nucleus Controls Conditioned Responses of Midbrain Dopamine Neurons in Behaving Rats

TL;DR: It is proposed that the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus relays information about the precise timing of attended sensory events, which is integrated with information about reward context by DA neurons.
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A Single-cell Study of the Axonal Projections Arising from the Posterior Intralaminar Thalamic Nuclei in the Rat

TL;DR: It is proposed on the basis of morphological, histochemical and hodological criteria that the caudal part of the posterior thalamic group in the rat is homologous to the suprageniculate‐limitans nuclei of cats and primates.
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Uncoordinated firing rate changes of striatal fast-spiking interneurons during behavioral task performance

TL;DR: 36 presumed striatal FSIs recorded in rats during well practiced performance of a radial maze win–stay task suggest that FSIs play a more complex role in the information processing achieved by striatal microcircuits than supposed by current theoretical models.
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Role of Supplementary Eye Field in Saccade Initiation: Executive, Not Direct, Control

TL;DR: Findings indicate that neurons in the SEF, in contrast to counterparts in the frontal eye field and superior colliculus, do not contribute directly and immediately to the initiation of visually guided saccades, however the SEf may proactively regulate saccade production by biasing the balance between gaze-holding and gaze-shifting based on prior performance and anticipated task requirements.
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