Executive Control Over Cognition: Stronger and Earlier Rule-Based Modulation of Spatial Category Signals in Prefrontal Cortex Relative to Parietal Cortex

被引:64
作者
Goodwin, Shikha J. [1 ,2 ]
Blackman, Rachael K. [1 ,4 ,5 ]
Sakellaridi, Sofia [1 ,3 ]
Chafee, Matthew V. [1 ,3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Vet Affairs Med Ctr, Brain Sci Ctr, Minneapolis, MN 55417 USA
[2] Univ Minnesota, Dept Biomed Engn, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
[3] Univ Minnesota, Ctr Cognit Sci, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
[4] Univ Minnesota, Sch Med, Dept Neurosci, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
[5] Univ Minnesota, Sch Med, MD PhD Training Program, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
VISUAL CATEGORIZATION; SINGLE NEURONS; PREMOTOR CORTEX; NEURAL ACTIVITY; ABSTRACT RULES; REPRESENTATION; SET; MONKEY; TASK; AREA;
D O I
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3585-11.2012
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Human cognition is characterized by flexibility, the ability to select not only which action but which cognitive process to engage to best achieve the current behavioral objective. The ability to tailor information processing in the brain to rules, goals, or context is typically referred to as executive control, and although there is consensus that prefrontal cortex is importantly involved, at present we have an incomplete understanding of how computational flexibility is implemented at the level of prefrontal neurons and networks. To better understand the neural mechanisms of computational flexibility, we simultaneously recorded the electrical activity of groups of single neurons within prefrontal and posterior parietal cortex of monkeys performing a task that required executive control of spatial cognitive processing. In this task, monkeys applied different spatial categorization rules to reassign the same set of visual stimuli to alternative categories on a trial-by-trial basis. We found that single neurons were activated to represent spatially defined categories in a manner that was rule dependent, providing a physiological signature of a cognitive process that was implemented under executive control. We found also that neural signals coding rule-dependent categories were distributed between the parietal and prefrontal cortex-however, not equally. Rule-dependent category signals were stronger, more powerfully modulated by the rule, and earlier to emerge in prefrontal cortex relative to parietal cortex. This suggests that prefrontal cortex may initiate the switch in neural representation at a network level that is important for computational flexibility.
引用
收藏
页码:3499 / 3515
页数:17
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