Chan Jason L, Koval Michael J, Johnston Kevin, Everling Stefan
Graduate Program in Neuroscience, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada; and.
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Oct 1;118(4):2156-2170. doi: 10.1152/jn.00139.2017. Epub 2017 Aug 9.
Successful task switching requires a network of brain areas to select, maintain, implement, and execute the appropriate task. Although frontoparietal brain areas are thought to play a critical role in task switching by selecting and encoding task rules and exerting top-down control, how brain areas closer to the execution of tasks participate in task switching is unclear. The superior colliculus (SC) integrates information from various brain areas to generate saccades and is likely influenced by task switching. Here, we investigated switch costs in nonhuman primates and their neural correlates in the activity of SC saccade-related neurons in monkeys performing cued, randomly interleaved pro- and anti-saccade trials. We predicted that behavioral switch costs would be associated with differential modulations of SC activity in trials on which the task was switched vs. repeated, with activity on the current trial resembling that associated with the task set of the previous trial when a switch occurred. We observed both error rate and reaction time switch costs and changes in the discharge rate and timing of activity in SC neurons between switch and repeat trials. These changes were present later in the task only after fixation on the cue stimuli but before saccade onset. These results further establish switch costs in macaque monkeys and suggest that SC activity is modulated by task-switching processes in a manner inconsistent with the concept of task set inertia. Task-switching behavior and superior colliculus (SC) activity were investigated in nonhuman primates performing randomly interleaved pro- and anti-saccade tasks. Here, we report error rate and reaction time switch costs in macaque monkeys and associated differences in stimulus-related activity of saccade-related neurons in the SC. These results provide a neural correlate for task switching and suggest that the SC is modulated by task-switching processes and may reflect the completion of task set reconfiguration.
成功的任务切换需要一个脑区网络来选择、维持、实施和执行适当的任务。虽然额顶叶脑区被认为在任务切换中通过选择和编码任务规则并施加自上而下的控制发挥关键作用,但更接近任务执行的脑区如何参与任务切换尚不清楚。上丘(SC)整合来自各个脑区的信息以产生扫视,并且可能受到任务切换的影响。在这里,我们研究了非人类灵长类动物的切换成本及其在执行线索化、随机交错的顺向和逆向扫视试验的猴子的SC扫视相关神经元活动中的神经相关性。我们预测,行为切换成本将与任务切换与重复试验中SC活动的差异调制相关,当发生切换时,当前试验的活动类似于与前一试验的任务集相关的活动。我们观察到了错误率和反应时间切换成本,以及切换试验和重复试验之间SC神经元放电率和活动时间的变化。这些变化仅在任务后期,在注视线索刺激之后但在扫视开始之前出现。这些结果进一步确定了猕猴的切换成本,并表明SC活动以与任务集惯性概念不一致的方式受到任务切换过程的调制。我们在执行随机交错的顺向和逆向扫视任务的非人类灵长类动物中研究了任务切换行为和上丘(SC)活动。在这里,我们报告了猕猴的错误率和反应时间切换成本以及SC中扫视相关神经元的刺激相关活动的相关差异。这些结果为任务切换提供了神经相关性,并表明SC受到任务切换过程的调制,可能反映了任务集重新配置的完成。