Ma Liya, Hyman James M, Durstewitz Daniel, Phillips Anthony G, Seamans Jeremy K
Robarts Research Institute, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario N6A 5B7, Canada,
Department of Psychology, University of Nevada Las Vegas, Las Vegas, Nevada 89154.
J Neurosci. 2016 Aug 3;36(31):8258-72. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3176-15.2016.
The frontal cortex has been implicated in a number of cognitive and motivational processes, but understanding how individual neurons contribute to these processes is particularly challenging as they respond to a broad array of events (multiplexing) in a manner that can be dynamically modulated by the task context, i.e., adaptive coding (Duncan, 2001). Fundamental questions remain, such as how the flexibility gained through these mechanisms is balanced by the need for consistency and how the ensembles of neurons are coherently shaped by task demands. In the present study, ensembles of medial frontal cortex neurons were recorded from rats trained to perform three different operant actions either in two different sequences or two different physical environments. Single neurons exhibited diverse mixtures of responsivity to each of the three actions and these mixtures were abruptly altered by context/sequence switches. Remarkably, the overall responsivity of the population remained highly consistent both within and between context/sequences because the gains versus losses were tightly balanced across neurons and across the three actions. These data are consistent with a reallocation mixture model in which individual neurons express unique mixtures of selectivity for different actions that become reallocated as task conditions change. However, because the allocations and reallocations are so well balanced across neurons, the population maintains a low but highly consistent response to all actions. The frontal cortex may therefore balance consistency with flexibility by having ensembles respond in a fixed way to task-relevant actions while abruptly reconfiguring single neurons to encode "actions in context."
Flexible modes of behavior involve performance of similar actions in contextually relevant ways. The present study quantified the changes in how rat medial frontal cortex neurons respond to the same actions when performed in different task contexts (sequences or environments). Most neurons altered the mixture of actions they were responsive to in different contexts or sequences. Nevertheless, the responsivity profile of the ensemble remained fixed as did the ability of the ensemble to differentiate between the three actions. These mechanisms may help to contextualize the manner in which common events are represented across different situations.
前额叶皮层与多种认知和动机过程有关,但要理解单个神经元如何对这些过程做出贡献极具挑战性,因为它们以一种可被任务背景动态调节的方式(即适应性编码,邓肯,2001年)对广泛的事件(复用)做出反应。一些基本问题仍然存在,比如通过这些机制获得的灵活性如何与一致性需求相平衡,以及神经元集群如何被任务需求连贯地塑造。在本研究中,从经过训练以两种不同顺序或两种不同物理环境执行三种不同操作性动作的大鼠身上记录内侧前额叶皮层神经元集群。单个神经元对三种动作中的每一种都表现出不同的反应混合,并且这些混合会因背景/顺序切换而突然改变。值得注意的是,群体的总体反应性在背景/顺序内和之间都保持高度一致,因为在神经元之间以及三种动作之间,增益与损失紧密平衡。这些数据与重新分配混合模型一致,在该模型中,单个神经元表达对不同动作的独特选择性混合,随着任务条件的变化这些混合会被重新分配。然而,由于在神经元之间分配和重新分配如此平衡,群体对所有动作保持低但高度一致的反应。因此,前额叶皮层可能通过让集群以固定方式对与任务相关的动作做出反应,同时突然重新配置单个神经元以编码“背景中的动作”来平衡一致性与灵活性。
灵活的行为模式涉及以与背景相关的方式执行相似的动作。本研究量化了大鼠内侧前额叶皮层神经元在不同任务背景(顺序或环境)下执行相同动作时反应方式的变化。大多数神经元改变了它们在不同背景或顺序下对其有反应的动作混合。然而,集群的反应性概况保持不变,集群区分三种动作的能力也保持不变。这些机制可能有助于将常见事件在不同情况下的呈现方式背景化。