# Elucidating the role of the lateral intraparietal area in visually-guided choice behavior

> **NIH NIH F31** · WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES · 2020 · $28,500

## Abstract

Project Summary
The goal of this project is to test critical aspects of the neural mechanisms thought to underlie perceptually-
guided choices, with reference to the lateral intraparietal area (LIP) and its putative role in perceptual decision-
making. A perceptual judgment is typically conceptualized as a covert process whereby sensory evidence is
weighted for or against potential choice alternatives, governing the execution of an overt motor response. This
dynamic process underlies all perceptually-guided behavior and involves a high level of coordination between
sensory, motor, and cognitive (e.g. attentional, memory, and reward) systems. The neural basis of
perceptually-guided behavior is typically studied using psychophysical tasks that afford the subject ample time
to complete the formation of a perceptual judgment before reporting the outcome with a motor action.
However, it is difficult, if not impossible to make accurate inferences about the dynamics of the decision-
making process based on behavioral measurements taken only after the judgment has already concluded its
development in time. To overcome this problem, the proposed study employs an “urgent” decision-making
paradigm, which allows for the temporal dynamics of a perceptual judgment to be inferred based on behavioral
measures gathered throughout its evolution in time. The experiments are designed such that neuronal activity
will be recorded from area LIP of non-human primates performing various urgent saccadic eye-movement
tasks, in order to address two specific aims. The first aim is to elucidate the behavioral correlates of perceptual
decision formation during performance of an urgent, dot-motion direction-discrimination task, as well as the
corresponding neural correlates in area LIP. Preliminary results indicate that monkeys can accurately
discriminate the direction of dot-motion within ~200 ms of stimulus onset, considerably sooner than previously
thought. Do direction-sensitive signals in LIP develop early enough to inform such rapid, accurate choices?
Thus far, the data show that they do not; i.e., under urgent conditions, motion-based signals in LIP develop too
late to inform the subject's accurate behavioral discriminations. The second aim is to elucidate whether and
how attentional context (i.e. top-down, bottom-up) influences the relationship between LIP activity and rapid
visually-guided choice behavior. Overall, the findings tentatively suggest that, rather than a direct
representation of sensory evidence integration (a widely held view), the activity in LIP may be better
understood as an attentional signal that often correlates with, but is not a pre-requisite to accurate, visually-
guided behavior. This investigation will help define the behavioral correlates and neural bases of rapid
perceptual decision-making — necessary steps toward improving the diagnosis, treatment, and understanding
of many neurological conditions of contemporary societal concern (e.g., sens...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 9878867
- **Project number:** 5F31EY029154-03
- **Recipient organization:** WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES
- **Principal Investigator:** Joshua Seideman
- **Activity code:** F31 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $28,500
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2018-03-08 → 2020-08-04

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/9878867

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 9878867, Elucidating the role of the lateral intraparietal area in visually-guided choice behavior (5F31EY029154-03). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-22 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/9878867. Licensed CC0.

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