Cowen Stephen L, McNaughton Bruce L
Arizona Research Labs, Division of Neural Systems, Memory and Aging and Department of Psychology, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2007 Jul;98(1):303-16. doi: 10.1152/jn.00150.2007. Epub 2007 May 16.
The medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) plays a critical role in the organization of goal-directed behaviors and in the learning of reinforcement contingencies. Given these observations, it was hypothesized that mPFC neurons may store associations between sequentially paired stimuli when both stimuli contribute to the prediction of reward. To test this hypothesis, neural-ensemble spiking activity was recorded as rats performed a paired-associate discrimination task. Rats were trained to associate sequentially presented stimuli with probabilistic reward. In one condition, both elements of the stimulus sequence provided information about reward delivery. In another condition, only the first stimulus contributed to the prediction. As hypothesized, stimulus-selective, prospective delay activity was observed during sequences in which both elements contributed to the prediction of reward. Unexpectedly, selective delay responses were associated with slight variations in head position and thus not necessarily generated by intrinsic mnemonic processes. Interestingly, the sensitivity of neurons to head position was greatest during intervals when reward delivery was certain. These results suggest that a significant portion of delay activity in the rat mPFC reflects task-relevant sensorimotor activity, possibly related to enhancing stimulus detection, rather than stimulus-stimulus associations. These observations agree with recent evidence that suggests that prefrontal neurons are particularly responsive during the performance of action sequences related to the acquisition of reward. These results also indicate that considerable attention must be given to the monitoring and analysis of sensorimotor variables during delay tasks because slight changes in position can produce activity in the mPFC that erroneously appears to be driven by intrinsic mechanisms.
内侧前额叶皮质(mPFC)在目标导向行为的组织以及强化偶联学习中起着关键作用。基于这些观察结果,有人提出假设,即当两种刺激都有助于预测奖励时,mPFC神经元可能会存储顺序配对刺激之间的关联。为了验证这一假设,在大鼠执行配对联想辨别任务时记录了神经群体的放电活动。大鼠经过训练,将顺序呈现的刺激与概率性奖励联系起来。在一种情况下,刺激序列的两个元素都提供了有关奖励发放的信息。在另一种情况下,只有第一个刺激有助于预测。正如所假设的那样,在两个元素都有助于预测奖励的序列中观察到了刺激选择性的前瞻性延迟活动。出乎意料的是,选择性延迟反应与头部位置的微小变化有关,因此不一定是由内在记忆过程产生的。有趣的是,在奖励发放确定的间隔期间,神经元对头部位置的敏感性最大。这些结果表明,大鼠mPFC中很大一部分延迟活动反映了与任务相关的感觉运动活动,可能与增强刺激检测有关,而不是刺激 - 刺激关联。这些观察结果与最近的证据一致,该证据表明前额叶神经元在与奖励获取相关的动作序列执行过程中特别敏感。这些结果还表明,在延迟任务期间必须高度重视感觉运动变量的监测和分析,因为位置的微小变化会在mPFC中产生活动,而这些活动错误地看起来是由内在机制驱动的。