Bruni Stefania, Giorgetti Valentina, Bonini Luca, Fogassi Leonardo
Department of Neuroscience, University of Parma, 43125 Parma, Italy, and
Department of Neuroscience, University of Parma, 43125 Parma, Italy, and.
J Neurosci. 2015 Aug 26;35(34):11877-90. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1938-15.2015.
The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is deemed to underlie the complexity, flexibility, and goal-directedness of primates' behavior. Most neurophysiological studies performed so far investigated PFC functions with arm-reaching or oculomotor tasks, thus leaving unclear whether, and to which extent, PFC neurons also play a role in goal-directed manipulative actions, such as those commonly used by primates during most of their daily activities. Here we trained two macaques to perform or withhold grasp-to-eat and grasp-to-place actions, depending on the combination of two subsequently presented cues: an auditory go/no-go cue (high/low tone) and a visually presented target (food/object). By varying the order of presentation of the two cues, we could segment and independently evaluate the processing and integration of contextual information allowing the monkey to make a decision on whether or not to act, and what action to perform. We recorded 403 task-related neurons from the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC): unimodal sensory-driven (37%), motor-related (21%), unimodal sensory-and-motor (23%), and multisensory (19%) neurons. Target and go/no-go selectivity characterized most of the recorded neurons, particularly those endowed with motor-related discharge. Interestingly, multisensory neurons appeared to encode a behavioral decision independently from the sensory modality of the stimulus allowing the monkey to make it: some of them reflected the decision to act or refraining from acting (56%), whereas others (44%) encoded the decision to perform (or withhold) a specific action (e.g., grasp-to-eat). Our findings indicate that VLPFC neurons play a role in the processing of contextual information underlying motor decision during goal-directed manipulative actions.
We demonstrated that macaque ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC) neurons show remarkable selectivity for different aspects of the contextual information allowing the monkey to select and execute goal-directed manipulative actions. Interestingly, a set of these neurons provide multimodal representations of the intended goal of a forthcoming action, encoding a behavioral decision (e.g., grasp-to-eat) independently from the sensory information allowing the monkey to make it. Our findings expand the available knowledge on prefrontal functions by showing that VLPFC neurons play a role in the selection and execution of goal-directed manipulative actions resembling those of common primates' foraging behaviors. On these bases, we propose that VLPFC may host an abstract "vocabulary" of the intended goals pursued by primates in their natural environment.
前额叶皮层(PFC)被认为是灵长类动物行为的复杂性、灵活性和目标导向性的基础。迄今为止进行的大多数神经生理学研究都是通过手臂伸展或眼球运动任务来研究PFC的功能,因此尚不清楚PFC神经元是否以及在多大程度上也在目标导向的操纵行为中发挥作用,例如灵长类动物在其大部分日常活动中常用的行为。在这里,我们训练了两只猕猴根据随后呈现的两个线索的组合来执行或抑制抓握进食和抓握放置动作:一个听觉的执行/不执行线索(高音/低音)和一个视觉呈现的目标(食物/物体)。通过改变两个线索的呈现顺序,我们可以分割并独立评估情境信息的处理和整合,从而使猴子能够决定是否行动以及执行什么行动。我们从腹外侧前额叶皮层(VLPFC)记录了403个与任务相关的神经元:单峰感觉驱动型(37%)、运动相关型(21%)、单峰感觉和运动型(23%)以及多感觉型(19%)神经元。目标和执行/不执行选择性是大多数记录神经元的特征,特别是那些具有运动相关放电的神经元。有趣的是,多感觉神经元似乎独立于刺激的感觉模态对行为决策进行编码,从而使猴子能够做出决策:其中一些反映了行动或不行动的决策(56%),而其他(44%)则编码了执行(或抑制)特定动作(例如抓握进食)的决策。我们的研究结果表明,VLPFC神经元在目标导向的操纵行为中运动决策背后的情境信息处理中发挥作用。
我们证明,猕猴腹外侧前额叶皮层(VLPFC)神经元对情境信息的不同方面表现出显著的选择性,从而使猴子能够选择并执行目标导向的操纵行为。有趣的是,其中一组神经元提供了即将到来的动作的预期目标的多模态表征,独立于使猴子能够做出决策的感觉信息对行为决策(例如抓握进食)进行编码。我们的研究结果通过表明VLPFC神经元在类似于普通灵长类动物觅食行为的目标导向操纵行为的选择和执行中发挥作用,扩展了关于前额叶功能的现有知识。基于这些,我们提出VLPFC可能包含灵长类动物在其自然环境中追求的预期目标的抽象“词汇表”。