Hyman James Michael, Hasselmo Michael Erik, Seamans Jeremy Keith
Brain Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Front Neurosci. 2011 Mar 4;5:24. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2011.00024. eCollection 2011.
There has been considerable interest in the importance of oscillations in the brain and in how these oscillations relate to the firing of single neurons. Recently a number of studies have shown that the spiking of individual neurons in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) become entrained to the hippocampal (HPC) theta rhythm. We recently showed that theta-entrained mPFC cells lost theta-entrainment specifically on error trials even though the firing rates of these cells did not change (Hyman et al., 2010). This implied that the level of HPC theta-entrainment of mPFC units was more predictive of trial outcome than differences in firing rates and that there is more information encoded by the mPFC on working memory tasks than can be accounted for by a simple rate code. Nevertheless, the functional meaning of mPFC entrainment to HPC theta remains a mystery. It is also unclear as to whether there are any differences in the nature of the information encoded by theta-entrained and non-entrained mPFC cells. In this review we discuss mPFC entrainment to HPC theta within the context of previous results as well as provide a more detailed analysis of the Hyman et al. (2010) data set. This re-analysis revealed that theta-entrained mPFC cells selectively encoded a variety of task-relevant behaviors and stimuli while never theta-entrained mPFC cells were most strongly attuned to errors or the lack of expected rewards. In fact, these error responsive neurons were responsible for the error representations exhibited by the entire ensemble of mPFC neurons. A theta reset was also detected in the post-error period. While it is becoming increasingly evident that mPFC neurons exhibit correlates to virtually all cues and behaviors, perhaps phase-locking directs attention to the task-relevant representations required to solve a spatially based working memory task while the loss of theta-entrainment at the start of error trials may represent a shift of attention away from these representations. The subsequent theta reset following error commission, when coupled with the robust responses of never theta-entrained cells, could produce a potent error-evoked signal used to alert the rat to changes in the relationship between task-relevant cues and reward expectations.
大脑中的振荡及其与单个神经元放电的关系的重要性已引起了相当大的关注。最近,多项研究表明,内侧前额叶皮层(mPFC)中单个神经元的放电会与海马体(HPC)的θ节律同步。我们最近发现,即使这些细胞的放电率没有变化,但在错误试验中,θ同步的mPFC细胞会特异性地失去θ同步(海曼等人,2010年)。这意味着mPFC单元的HPC θ同步水平比放电率差异更能预测试验结果,并且在工作记忆任务中,mPFC编码的信息比简单的速率编码所能解释的更多。然而,mPFC与HPC θ同步的功能意义仍然是个谜。同样不清楚的是,θ同步和非θ同步的mPFC细胞所编码信息的性质是否存在差异。在这篇综述中,我们结合先前的研究结果讨论了mPFC与HPC θ同步的情况,并对海曼等人(2010年)的数据集进行了更详细的分析。重新分析发现,θ同步的mPFC细胞选择性地编码了各种与任务相关的行为和刺激,而从未θ同步的mPFC细胞则对错误或预期奖励的缺失最为敏感。事实上,这些对错误有反应的神经元负责整个mPFC神经元群体所表现出的错误表征。在错误发生后的时间段内也检测到了θ重置。虽然越来越明显的是,mPFC神经元几乎与所有线索和行为都存在关联,但或许相位锁定将注意力引向了解决基于空间的工作记忆任务所需的与任务相关的表征上,而在错误试验开始时θ同步的丧失可能代表注意力从这些表征上转移。错误发生后随后的θ重置,再加上从未θ同步细胞的强烈反应,可能会产生一个强大的错误诱发信号,用于提醒大鼠注意与任务相关线索和奖励预期之间关系的变化。