Department of Psychiatry, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242.
J Neurosci. 2023 Dec 6;43(49):8385-8402. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0731-23.2023.
Communication between the cerebellum and forebrain structures is necessary for motor learning and has been implicated in a variety of cognitive functions. The exact nature of cerebellar-forebrain interactions supporting behavior and cognition is not known. We examined how local and network activity support learning by simultaneously recording neural activity in the cerebellum, amygdala, and anterior cingulate cortex while male and female rats were trained in trace eyeblink conditioning. Initially, the cerebellum and forebrain signal the contingency between external stimuli through increases in theta power and synchrony. Neuronal activity driving expression of the learned response was observed in the cerebellum and became evident in the anterior cingulate and amygdala as learning progressed. Aligning neural activity to the training stimuli or learned response provided a way to differentiate between learning-related activity driven by different mechanisms. Stimulus and response-related increases in theta power and coherence were observed across all three areas throughout learning. However, increases in slow gamma power and coherence were only observed when oscillations were aligned to the cerebellum-driven learned response. Percentage of learned responses, learning-related local activity, and slow gamma communication from cerebellum to forebrain all progressively increased during training. The relatively fast frequency of slow gamma provides an ideal mechanism for the cerebellum to communicate learned temporal information to the forebrain. This cerebellar response-aligned slow gamma then provides enrichment of behavior-specific temporal information to local neuronal activity in the forebrain. These dynamic network interactions likely support a wide range of behaviors and cognitive tasks that require coordination between the forebrain and cerebellum. This study presents new evidence for how dynamic learning-related changes in single neurons and neural oscillations in a cerebellar-forebrain network support associative motor learning. The current results provide an integrated mechanism for how bidirectional communication between the cerebellum and forebrain represents important external events and internal neural drive. This bidirectional communication between the cerebellum and forebrain likely supports a wide range of behaviors and cognitive tasks that require temporal precision.
小脑与前脑结构之间的通讯对于运动学习是必要的,并且与各种认知功能有关。支持行为和认知的小脑-前脑相互作用的确切性质尚不清楚。我们同时记录了雄性和雌性大鼠在痕迹眨眼条件反射训练过程中的小脑、杏仁核和前扣带皮层的神经活动,以研究局部和网络活动如何支持学习。最初,小脑和前脑通过增加θ功率和同步来预示外部刺激之间的关联。在学习过程中,观察到驱动学习反应的神经元活动出现在小脑,并且在前扣带和杏仁核中变得明显。将神经活动与训练刺激或学习反应对齐为区分不同机制驱动的学习相关活动提供了一种方法。在整个学习过程中,在所有三个区域中都观察到与刺激和反应相关的θ功率和相干性增加。然而,只有当振荡与小脑驱动的学习反应对齐时,才观察到慢γ功率和相干性的增加。在训练过程中,学习反应的百分比、学习相关的局部活动以及从小脑到前脑的慢γ通讯都逐渐增加。慢γ的相对较快的频率为小脑向前脑传达学习的时间信息提供了理想的机制。这种小脑反应对齐的慢γ然后为前脑局部神经元活动提供了丰富的行为特异性时间信息。这些动态网络相互作用可能支持需要前脑和小脑之间协调的广泛行为和认知任务。本研究提供了新的证据,证明小脑-前脑网络中单神经元和神经振荡的动态学习相关变化如何支持联想运动学习。当前的结果为小脑和前脑之间的双向通信如何代表重要的外部事件和内部神经驱动提供了一个综合的机制。小脑和前脑之间的这种双向通信可能支持需要时间精度的广泛行为和认知任务。