RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Posterior parietal cortex guides visual decisions in rats JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 066639 DO 10.1101/066639 A1 Angela M. Licata A1 Matthew T. Kaufman A1 David Raposo A1 Michael B. Ryan A1 John P. Sheppard A1 Anne K. Churchland YR 2016 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/07/29/066639.abstract AB Neurons in putative decision-making structures can reflect both sensory and decision signals, making their causal role in decisions unclear. Here, we tested whether rat posterior parietal cortex (PPC) is causal for processing visual sensory signals or instead for accumulating evidence for decision alternatives. We optogenetically disrupted PPC activity during decision-making and compared effects on decisions guided by auditory vs. visual evidence. Deficits were largely restricted to visual decisions. To further test for visual dominance in PPC, we evaluated electrophysiological responses following individual sensory events and observed much larger responses following visual stimuli than auditory stimuli. Finally, we measured spike count variability during stimulus presentation and decision formation. This sharply decreased, suggesting the network is stabilized by inputs, unlike what would be expected if sensory signals were locally accumulated. Our findings argue that PPC plays a causal role in discriminating visual signals that are accumulated elsewhere.