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Article Abstract

The cerebellum is critical for motor timing control and error-driven motor learning. To reveal how the cerebellum transmits these process-relevant signals to the premotor cortex, we conducted two-photon calcium imaging of cerebellar-thalamocortical axons in the premotor cortex in male mice during a self-timing lever-pull task that required 1-1.7 s of waiting after cue onset. In non-expert sessions with many lever-pulls being made before the 1-s waiting, the axons of thalamic neurons that received cerebellar outputs exhibited larger transient activity immediately after the cue onset in post-error (i.e., post-non-rewarded) trials than in post-success trials, and the waiting time and success rate were greater in post-error trials than in post-success trials. In expert sessions, the post-error-specific activity or behavior was absent. Instead, ramping activity toward lever-pull onset that did not depend on the waiting time shortened in expert sessions in comparison with non-expert sessions. Our results suggest that the cerebellum emits the reward-based post-error signal for waiting time adjustment during learning, and the well-tuned motor timing signal after learning.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12361424PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-62831-6DOI Listing

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