Brody Carlos D, Hernández Adrián, Zainos Antonio, Romo Ranulfo
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1 Bungtown Road, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724, USA.
Cereb Cortex. 2003 Nov;13(11):1196-207. doi: 10.1093/cercor/bhg100.
We trained monkeys to compare the frequencies of two mechanical vibrations applied sequentially to the tip of a finger and to report which of the two stimuli had the higher frequency. This task requires remembering the first frequency during the delay period between the two stimuli. Recordings were made from neurons in the inferior convexity of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) while the monkeys performed the task. We report neurons that fire persistently during the delay period, with a firing rate that is a monotonic function of the frequency of the first stimulus. Separately from, and in addition to, their correlation with the first stimulus, the delay period firing rates of these neurons were correlated with the behavior of the monkey, in a manner consistent with their interpretation as the neural substrate of working memory during the task. Most neurons had firing rates that varied systematically with time during the delay period. We suggest that this time-dependent activity may encode time itself and may be an intrinsic part of active memory maintenance mechanisms.
我们训练猴子比较依次施加于手指尖的两种机械振动的频率,并报告两种刺激中哪一种频率更高。这项任务需要在两种刺激之间的延迟期内记住第一个频率。在猴子执行任务时,我们从前额叶皮质(PFC)下凸的神经元进行记录。我们报告了在延迟期持续放电的神经元,其放电率是第一个刺激频率的单调函数。除了与第一个刺激的相关性之外,这些神经元在延迟期的放电率还与猴子的行为相关,这与它们被解释为任务期间工作记忆的神经基质相一致。大多数神经元在延迟期的放电率随时间系统地变化。我们认为这种与时间相关的活动可能编码时间本身,并且可能是主动记忆维持机制的固有组成部分。