Interdisciplinary Graduate Program in Neuroscience, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52245
Cognitive Control Collaborative, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52245.
J Neurosci. 2023 Jan 11;43(2):282-292. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0464-22.2022. Epub 2022 Dec 5.
During goal-directed behavior, humans purportedly form and retrieve so-called event files, conjunctive representations that link context-specific information about stimuli, their associated actions, and the expected action outcomes. The automatic formation, and later retrieval, of such conjunctive representations can substantially facilitate efficient action selection. However, recent behavioral work suggests that these event files may also adversely affect future behavior, especially when action requirements have changed between successive instances of the same task context (e.g., during task switching). Here, we directly tested this hypothesis with a recently developed method for measuring the strength of the neural representations of context-specific stimulus-action conjunctions (i.e., event files). Thirty-five male and female adult humans performed a task switching paradigm while undergoing EEG recordings. Replicating previous behavioral work, we found that changes in action requirements between two spaced repetitions of the same task incurred a significant reaction time cost. By combining multivariate pattern analysis and representational similarity analysis of the EEG recordings with linear mixed-effects modeling of trial-to-trial behavior, we then found that the magnitude of this behavioral cost was directly proportional to the strength of the conjunctive representation formed during the most recent previous exposure to the same task, that is, the most recent event file. This confirms that the formation of conjunctive representations of specific task contexts, stimuli, and actions in the brain can indeed adversely affect future behavior. Moreover, these findings demonstrate the potential of neural decoding of complex task set representations toward the prediction of behavior beyond the current trial. Understanding how the human brain organizes individual components of complex tasks is paramount for understanding higher-order cognition. During complex tasks, the brain forms conjunctive representations that link individual task features (contexts, stimuli, actions), which aids future performance of the same task. However, this can have adverse effects when the required sequence of actions within a task changes. We decoded conjunctive representations from electroencephalographic recordings during a task that included frequent changes to the rules determining the response. Indeed, stronger initial conjunctive representations predicted significant future response-time costs when task contexts repeated with changed response requirements. Showing that the formation of conjunctive task representations can have negative future effects generates novel insights into complex behavior and cognition, including task switching, planning, and problem solving.
在目标导向行为中,人类据称会形成和检索所谓的事件文件,即连接关于刺激、相关动作以及预期动作结果的特定于上下文的信息的联合表示。这种联合表示的自动形成和随后的检索可以极大地促进有效的动作选择。然而,最近的行为研究表明,这些事件文件也可能对未来的行为产生不利影响,特别是在连续的相同任务环境中(例如,在任务转换期间),动作要求已经发生变化时。在这里,我们使用最近开发的一种测量特定于上下文的刺激-动作联合神经表示(即事件文件)强度的方法直接检验了这一假设。三十五名男性和女性成年人在进行脑电图记录的同时执行任务转换范式。复制先前的行为研究,我们发现,在两次相同任务的间隔重复中,动作要求的变化会导致明显的反应时间成本。通过结合多变量模式分析和脑电图记录的表示相似性分析以及对试验到试验行为的线性混合效应建模,我们发现,这种行为成本的大小与最近一次暴露于相同任务时形成的联合表示的强度成正比,即最近的事件文件。这证实了大脑中特定任务环境、刺激和动作的联合表示的形成确实会对未来的行为产生不利影响。此外,这些发现表明,对复杂任务集表示的神经解码具有预测当前试验之外的行为的潜力。理解大脑如何组织复杂任务的各个组成部分对于理解更高阶的认知至关重要。在复杂任务中,大脑会形成联合表示,将单个任务特征(上下文、刺激、动作)联系起来,从而有助于同一任务的未来表现。然而,当任务中所需的动作序列发生变化时,这可能会产生不利影响。我们在包括频繁改变确定反应规则的任务中从脑电图记录中解码联合表示。事实上,当任务上下文重复且响应要求发生变化时,更强的初始联合表示预测了显著的未来响应时间成本。表明联合任务表示的形成可能对复杂行为和认知产生负面影响,包括任务转换、计划和解决问题。