RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Neural trajectories in the supplementary motor area and primary motor cortex exhibit distinct geometries, compatible with different classes of computation JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 650002 DO 10.1101/650002 A1 Abigail A. Russo A1 Ramin Khajeh A1 Sean R. Bittner A1 Sean M. Perkins A1 John P. Cunningham A1 Laurence F. Abbott A1 Mark M. Churchland YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/05/24/650002.abstract AB The supplementary motor area (SMA) is believed to contribute to higher-order aspects of motor control. To examine this contribution, we employed a novel cycling task and leveraged an emerging strategy: testing whether population trajectories possess properties necessary for a hypothesized class of computations. We found that, at the single-neuron level, SMA exhibited multiple response features absent in M1. We hypothesized that these diverse features might contribute, at the population level, to avoidance of ‘population trajectory divergence’ – ensuring that two trajectories never followed the same path before separating. Trajectory divergence was indeed avoided in SMA but not in M1. Network simulations confirmed that low trajectory divergence is necessary when guidance of future action depends upon internally tracking contextual factors. Furthermore, the empirical trajectory geometry – helical in SMA versus elliptical in M1 – was naturally reproduced by networks that did, versus did not, internally track context.