Cellular Neurobiology Research Branch, Behavioral Neurophysiology Research Section, National Institute on Drug Abuse Intramural Research Program, Baltimore, Maryland 21224
Cellular Neurobiology Research Branch, Behavioral Neurophysiology Research Section, National Institute on Drug Abuse Intramural Research Program, Baltimore, Maryland 21224.
J Neurosci. 2021 Mar 3;41(9):1941-1951. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0753-20.2020. Epub 2021 Jan 14.
Animals can categorize the environment into "states," defined by unique sets of available action-outcome contingencies in different contexts. Doing so helps them choose appropriate actions and make accurate outcome predictions when in each given state. State maps have been hypothesized to be held in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), an area implicated in decision-making and encoding information about outcome predictions. Here we recorded neural activity in OFC in 6 male rats to test state representations. Rats were trained on an odor-guided choice task consisting of five trial blocks containing distinct sets of action-outcome contingencies, constituting states, with unsignaled transitions between them. OFC neural ensembles were analyzed using decoding algorithms. Results indicate that the vast majority of OFC neurons contributed to representations of the current state at any point in time, independent of odor cues and reward delivery, even at the level of individual neurons. Across state transitions, these representations gradually integrated evidence for the new state; the rate at which this integration happened in the prechoice part of the trial was related to how quickly the rats' choices adapted to the new state. Finally, OFC representations of outcome predictions, often thought to be the primary function of OFC, were dependent on the accuracy of OFC state representations. A prominent hypothesis proposes that orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) tracks current location in a "cognitive map" of state space. Here we tested this idea in detail by analyzing neural activity recorded in OFC of rats performing a task consisting of a series of states, each defined by a set of available action-outcome contingencies. Results show that most OFC neurons contribute to state representations and that these representations are related to the rats' decision-making and OFC reward predictions. These findings suggest new interpretations of emotional dysregulation in pathologies, such as addiction, which have long been known to be related to OFC dysfunction.
动物可以将环境划分为“状态”,这些状态由不同情境下独特的可用动作-结果关联集定义。这样做有助于它们在每个给定状态下选择适当的动作并做出准确的结果预测。状态图被假设存在于眶额皮层(OFC)中,该区域涉及决策和对结果预测信息的编码。在这里,我们记录了 6 只雄性大鼠的 OFC 中的神经活动,以测试状态表示。大鼠接受了一项气味引导的选择任务训练,该任务由五个包含不同动作-结果关联集的试验块组成,构成状态,状态之间没有信号转换。使用解码算法分析 OFC 神经集合。结果表明,绝大多数 OFC 神经元在任何时间点都有助于当前状态的表示,与气味线索和奖励传递无关,即使在单个神经元的水平上也是如此。在状态转换过程中,这些表示逐渐整合了新状态的证据;在试验的选择前部分中,这种整合发生的速度与大鼠选择适应新状态的速度有关。最后,通常被认为是 OFC 的主要功能的 OFC 对结果预测的表示取决于 OFC 状态表示的准确性。一个突出的假设是,眶额皮层(OFC)在状态空间的“认知图”中跟踪当前位置。在这里,我们通过分析大鼠在一系列状态下执行任务时记录的 OFC 中的神经活动来详细测试这个想法,每个状态都由一组可用的动作-结果关联集定义。结果表明,大多数 OFC 神经元有助于状态表示,并且这些表示与大鼠的决策和 OFC 奖励预测有关。这些发现为情绪失调在病理学中的新解释提供了依据,例如成瘾,这一直以来都与 OFC 功能障碍有关。