Abstract
How do populations of cortical neurons have the flexibility to perform different functions? We investigated this question in primary motor cortex (M1), where populations of neurons are able to generate a rich repertoire of motor behaviors. We recorded neural activity while monkeys performed a variety of wrist and reach-to-grasp motor tasks, each requiring a different pattern of neural activity. We characterized the flexibility of M1 movement control by comparing the “neural modes” that capture covariation across neurons, believed to arise from network connectivity. We found large similarities in the structure of the neural modes across tasks, as well as striking similarities in their temporal activation dynamics. These similarities were only apparent at the population level. Moreover, a subset of these well-preserved modes captured a task-independent mapping onto muscle commands. We hypothesize that this system of flexibly combined, stable neural modes gives M1 the flexibility to generate our wide-ranging behavioral repertoire.