Del Arco Alberto, Park Junchol, Wood Jesse, Kim Yunbok, Moghaddam Bita
Department of Neuroscience and Center for Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260
Department of Neuroscience and Center for Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260.
J Neurosci. 2017 Aug 30;37(35):8363-8373. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0450-17.2017. Epub 2017 Jul 20.
The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is thought to play a critical role in behavioral flexibility by monitoring action-outcome contingencies. How PFC ensembles represent shifts in behavior in response to changes in these contingencies remains unclear. We recorded single-unit activity and local field potentials in the dorsomedial PFC (dmPFC) of male rats during a set-shifting task that required them to update their behavior, among competing options, in response to changes in action-outcome contingencies. As behavior was updated, a subset of PFC ensembles encoded the current trial outcome before the outcome was presented. This novel outcome-prediction encoding was absent in a control task, in which actions were rewarded pseudorandomly, indicating that PFC neurons are not merely providing an expectancy signal. In both control and set-shifting tasks, dmPFC neurons displayed postoutcome discrimination activity, indicating that these neurons also monitor whether a behavior is successful in generating rewards. Gamma-power oscillatory activity increased before the outcome in both tasks but did not differentiate between expected outcomes, suggesting that this measure is not related to set-shifting behavior but reflects expectation of an outcome after action execution. These results demonstrate that PFC neurons support flexible rule-based action selection by predicting outcomes that follow a particular action. Tracking action-outcome contingencies and modifying behavior when those contingencies change is critical to behavioral flexibility. We find that ensembles of dorsomedial prefrontal cortex neurons differentiate between expected outcomes when action-outcome contingencies change. This predictive mode of signaling may be used to promote a new response strategy at the service of behavioral flexibility.
前额叶皮层(PFC)被认为通过监测动作-结果的偶然性在行为灵活性中发挥关键作用。PFC神经元集群如何根据这些偶然性的变化来表征行为的转变仍不清楚。在一项集合转换任务中,我们记录了雄性大鼠背内侧前额叶皮层(dmPFC)的单单元活动和局部场电位,该任务要求它们在竞争选项中根据动作-结果偶然性的变化更新行为。随着行为的更新,一部分PFC神经元集群在结果呈现之前就编码了当前试验的结果。在一个动作被伪随机奖励的对照任务中,这种新的结果预测编码并不存在,这表明PFC神经元不仅仅是提供一个预期信号。在对照任务和集合转换任务中,dmPFC神经元都表现出结果后辨别活动,表明这些神经元也监测一种行为在产生奖励方面是否成功。在这两个任务中,γ功率振荡活动在结果出现之前都会增加,但不能区分预期结果,这表明该指标与集合转换行为无关,而是反映了动作执行后对结果的预期。这些结果表明,PFC神经元通过预测特定动作之后的结果来支持基于灵活规则的动作选择。追踪动作-结果的偶然性并在这些偶然性变化时修改行为对于行为灵活性至关重要。我们发现,当动作-结果偶然性变化时,背内侧前额叶皮层神经元集群能够区分预期结果。这种预测性的信号传导模式可能被用来促进一种新的反应策略,以服务于行为灵活性。