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1.
Elife ; 132024 Feb 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38319151

ABSTRACT

Schizophrenia results in part from a failure of prefrontal networks but we lack full understanding of how disruptions at a synaptic level cause failures at the network level. This is a crucial gap in our understanding because it prevents us from discovering how genetic mutations and environmental risks that alter synaptic function cause prefrontal network to fail in schizophrenia. To address that question, we developed a recurrent spiking network model of prefrontal local circuits that can explain the link between NMDAR synaptic and 0-lag spike synchrony deficits we recently observed in a pharmacological monkey model of prefrontal network failure in schizophrenia. We analyze how the balance between AMPA and NMDA components of recurrent excitation and GABA inhibition in the network influence oscillatory spike synchrony to inform the biological data. We show that reducing recurrent NMDAR synaptic currents prevents the network from shifting from a steady to oscillatory state in response to extrinsic inputs such as might occur during behavior. These findings strongly parallel dynamic modulation of 0-lag spike synchrony we observed between neurons in monkey prefrontal cortex during behavior, as well as the suppression of this 0-lag spiking by administration of NMDAR antagonists. As such, our cortical network model provides a plausible mechanism explaining the link between NMDAR synaptic and 0-lag spike synchrony deficits observed in a pharmacological monkey model of prefrontal network failure in schizophrenia.


Schizophrenia is a long-term mental health condition that can cause a person to see, hear or believe things that are not real. Although researchers do not fully understand the causes of schizophrenia, it is known to disrupt synapses, which connect neurons in the brain to form circuits that carry out a specific function when activated. This disruption alters the pattern of activity among the neurons, distorting the way that information is processed and leading to symptoms. Development of schizophrenia is thought to be due to interactions between many factors, including genetic makeup, changes in how the brain matures during development, and environmental stress. Despite animal studies revealing how neural circuits can fail at the level of individual cells, it remains difficult to predict or understand the complex ways that this damage affects advanced brain functions. Previous research in monkeys showed that mimicking schizophrenia using a drug that blocks a particular type of synapse prevented neurons from coordinating their activity. However, this did not address how synaptic and cellular changes lead to disrupted neural circuits. To better understand this, Crowe et al. developed a computational model of neural circuits to study how they respond to synapse disruption. To replicate the brain, the model consisted of two types of neurons ­ those that activate connecting cells in response to received signals and those that suppress them. This model could replicate the complex network behavior that causes brain cells to respond to sensory inputs. Increasing the strength of inputs to the network caused it to switch from a state in which the cells fired independently to one where the cells fired at the same time. As was previously seen in monkeys, blocking a particular type of synapse thought to be involved in schizophrenia prevented the cells from coordinating their signaling. The findings suggest that schizophrenia-causing factors can reduce the ability of neurons to fire at the same instant. Disrupting this process could lead to weaker and fewer synapses forming during brain development or loss of synapses in adults. If that is the case, and scientists can understand how factors combine to trigger this process, the mechanism of coordinated activity failure revealed by the model could help identify treatments that prevent or reverse the synapse disruption seen in schizophrenia.


Subject(s)
Schizophrenia , Animals , Inhibition, Psychological , Mutation , Neurons , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate , Haplorhini
2.
J Neurosci ; 43(15): 2767-2781, 2023 04 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36894317

ABSTRACT

To better understand how prefrontal networks mediate forms of cognitive control disrupted in schizophrenia, we translated a variant of the AX continuous performance task that measures specific deficits in the human disease to 2 male monkeys and recorded neurons in PFC and parietal cortex during task performance. In the task, contextual information instructed by cue stimuli determines the response required to a subsequent probe stimulus. We found parietal neurons encoding the behavioral context instructed by cues that exhibited nearly identical activity to their prefrontal counterparts (Blackman et al., 2016). This neural population switched their preference for stimuli over the course of the trial depending on whether the stimuli signaled the need to engage cognitive control to override a prepotent response. Cues evoked visual responses that appeared in parietal neurons first, whereas population activity encoding contextual information instructed by cues was stronger and more persistent in PFC. Increasing cognitive control demand biased the representation of contextual information toward the PFC and augmented the temporal correlation of task-defined information encoded by neurons in the two areas. Oscillatory dynamics in local field potentials differed between cortical areas and carried as much information about task conditions as spike rates. We found that, at the single-neuron level, patterns of activity evoked by the task were nearly identical between the two cortical areas. Nonetheless, distinct population dynamics in PFC and parietal cortex were evident. suggesting differential contributions to cognitive control.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT We recorded neural activity in PFC and parietal cortex of monkeys performing a task that measures cognitive control deficits in schizophrenia. This allowed us to characterize computations performed by neurons in the two areas to support forms of cognitive control disrupted in the disease. Subpopulations of neurons in the two areas exhibited parallel modulations in firing rate; and as a result, all patterns of task-evoked activity were distributed between PFC and parietal cortex. This included the presence in both cortical areas of neurons reflecting proactive and reactive cognitive control dissociated from stimuli or responses in the task. However, differences in the timing, strength, synchrony, and correlation of information encoded by neural activity were evident, indicating differential contributions to cognitive control.


Subject(s)
Cues , Prefrontal Cortex , Humans , Male , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Parietal Lobe/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Cognition/physiology
3.
Curr Biol ; 32(1): 14-25.e4, 2022 01 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34678162

ABSTRACT

Schizophrenia results from hundreds of known causes, including genetic, environmental, and developmental insults that cooperatively increase risk of developing the disease. In spite of the diversity of causal factors, schizophrenia presents with a core set of symptoms and brain abnormalities (both structural and functional) that particularly impact the prefrontal cortex. This suggests that many different causal factors leading to schizophrenia may cause prefrontal neurons and circuits to fail in fundamentally similar ways. The nature of convergent malfunctions in prefrontal circuits at the cell and synaptic levels leading to schizophrenia are not known. Here, we apply convergence-guided search to identify core pathological changes in the functional properties of prefrontal circuits that lie downstream of mechanistically distinct insults relevant to the disease. We compare the impacts of blocking NMDA receptors in monkeys and deleting a schizophrenia risk gene in mice on activity timing and effective communication in prefrontal local circuits. Although these manipulations operate through distinct molecular pathways and biological mechanisms, we found they produced convergent pathophysiological effects on prefrontal local circuits. Both manipulations reduced the frequency of synchronous (0-lag) spiking between prefrontal neurons and weakened functional interactions between prefrontal neurons at monosynaptic lags as measured by information transfer between the neurons. The two observations may be related, as reduction in synchronous spiking between prefrontal neurons would be expected to weaken synaptic connections between them via spike-timing-dependent synaptic plasticity. These data suggest that the link between spike timing and synaptic connectivity could comprise the functional vulnerability that multiple risk factors exploit to produce disease.


Subject(s)
Schizophrenia , Animals , Mice , Neurons/metabolism , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate/genetics , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate/metabolism , Schizophrenia/genetics
4.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32513554

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The causal biology underlying schizophrenia is not well understood, but it is likely to involve a malfunction in how neurons adjust synaptic connections in response to patterns of activity in networks. We examined statistical dependencies between neural signals at the cell, local circuit, and distributed network levels in prefrontal and parietal cortices of monkeys performing a variant of the AX continuous performance task paradigm. We then quantified changes in the pattern of neural interactions across levels of scale following NMDA receptor (NMDAR) blockade and related these changes to a pattern of cognitive control errors closely matching the performance of patients with schizophrenia. METHODS: We recorded the spiking activity of 1762 neurons along with local field potentials at multiple electrode sites in prefrontal and parietal cortices concurrently, and we generated binary time series indicating the presence or absence of spikes in single neurons or local field potential power above or below a threshold. We then applied causal discovery analysis to the time series to detect statistical dependencies between the signals (causal interactions) and compared the pattern of these interactions before and after NMDAR blockade. RESULTS: Global blockade of NMDAR produced distinctive and frequently opposite changes in neural interactions at the cell, local circuit, and network levels in prefrontal and parietal cortices. Cognitive control errors were associated with decreased interactions at the cell level and with opposite changes at the network level in prefrontal and parietal cortices. CONCLUSIONS: NMDAR synaptic deficits change causal interactions between neural signals at different levels of scale that correlate with schizophrenia-like deficits in cognitive control.


Subject(s)
Schizophrenia , Animals , Cognition , Humans , Macaca mulatta , Male , Parietal Lobe , Prefrontal Cortex/metabolism , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate , United States
5.
J Neurosci ; 40(8): 1650-1667, 2020 02 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31941665

ABSTRACT

The mediodorsal nucleus of the thalamus (MD) is reciprocally connected with the prefrontal cortex (PFC), and although the MD has been implicated in a range of PFC-dependent cognitive functions (Watanabe and Funahashi, 2012; Mitchell and Chakraborty, 2013; Parnaudeau et al., 2018), little is known about how MD neurons in the primate participate specifically in cognitive control, a capability that reflects the ability to use contextual information (such as a rule) to modify responses to environmental stimuli. To learn how the MD-PFC thalamocortical network is engaged to mediate forms of cognitive control that are selectively disrupted in schizophrenia, we trained male monkeys to perform a variant of the AX continuous performance task, which reliably measures cognitive control deficits in patients (Henderson et al., 2012) and used linear multielectrode arrays to record neural activity in the MD and PFC simultaneously. We found that the two structures made clearly different contributions to distributed processing for cognitive control: MD neurons were specialized for decision-making and response selection, whereas prefrontal neurons were specialized to preferentially encode the environmental state on which the decision was based. In addition, we observed that functional coupling between MD and PFC was strongest when the decision as to which of the two responses in the task to execute was being made. These findings delineate unique contributions of MD and PFC to distributed processing for cognitive control and characterized neural dynamics in this network associated with normative cognitive control performance.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Cognitive control is fundamental to healthy human executive functioning (Miller and Cohen, 2001) and deficits in patients with schizophrenia relate to decreased functional activation of the MD thalamus and the prefrontal cortex (Minzenberg et al., 2009), which are reciprocally linked (Goldman-Rakic and Porrino, 1985; Xiao et al., 2009). We carry out simultaneous neural recordings in the MD and PFC while monkeys perform a cognitive control task translated from patients with schizophrenia to relate thalamocortical dynamics to cognitive control performance. Our data suggest that state representation and decision-making computations for cognitive control are preferentially performed by PFC and MD, respectively. This suggests experiments to parse decision-making and state representation deficits in patients while providing novel computational targets for future therapies.


Subject(s)
Cognition/physiology , Decision Making/physiology , Mediodorsal Thalamic Nucleus/physiopathology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiopathology , Schizophrenia/physiopathology , Animals , Electrodes, Implanted , Macaca mulatta , Male , Neural Pathways/physiology , Neurons/physiology
6.
Neuron ; 98(6): 1243-1255.e5, 2018 06 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29861281

ABSTRACT

We employed multi-electrode array recording to evaluate the influence of NMDA receptors (NMDAR) on spike-timing dynamics in prefrontal networks of monkeys as they performed a cognitive control task measuring specific deficits in schizophrenia. Systemic, periodic administration of an NMDAR antagonist (phencyclidine) reduced the prevalence and strength of synchronous (0-lag) spike correlation in simultaneously recorded neuron pairs. We employed transfer entropy analysis to measure effective connectivity between prefrontal neurons at lags consistent with monosynaptic interactions and found that effective connectivity was persistently reduced following exposure to the NMDAR antagonist. These results suggest that a disruption of spike timing and effective connectivity might be interrelated factors in pathogenesis, supporting an activity-dependent disconnection theory of schizophrenia. In this theory, disruption of NMDAR synaptic function leads to dysregulated timing of action potentials in prefrontal networks, accelerating synaptic disconnection through a spike-timing-dependent mechanism.


Subject(s)
Cognition/physiology , Cortical Synchronization/physiology , Executive Function/physiology , Neurons/metabolism , Prefrontal Cortex/metabolism , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate/metabolism , Schizophrenia/metabolism , Action Potentials/drug effects , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Cognition/drug effects , Cortical Synchronization/drug effects , Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists/pharmacology , Executive Function/drug effects , Macaca mulatta , Neural Pathways/drug effects , Neural Pathways/metabolism , Neural Pathways/physiopathology , Neurons/drug effects , Phencyclidine/pharmacology , Prefrontal Cortex/drug effects , Prefrontal Cortex/physiopathology , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate/antagonists & inhibitors , Schizophrenia/physiopathology , Task Performance and Analysis , Time Factors
7.
Neuron ; 96(2): 256-258, 2017 Oct 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29024651

ABSTRACT

In this issue, Loonis et al. (2017) provide the first description of unique synchrony patterns differentiating implicit and explicit forms of learning in monkey prefrontal networks. Their results have broad implications for how prefrontal networks integrate the two learning mechanisms to control behavior.


Subject(s)
Haplorhini , Learning , Animals , Humans , Prefrontal Cortex , Reaction Time
8.
J Neurosci ; 36(14): 4067-79, 2016 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27053213

ABSTRACT

Cognitive control is the ability to modify the behavioral response to a stimulus based on internal representations of goals or rules. We sought to characterize neural mechanisms in prefrontal cortex associated with cognitive control in a context that would maximize the potential for future translational relevance to human neuropsychiatric disease. To that end, we trained monkeys to perform a dot-pattern variant of the AX continuous performance task that is used to measure cognitive control impairment in patients with schizophrenia (MacDonald, 2008;Jones et al., 2010). Here we describe how information processing for cognitive control in this task is related to neural activity patterns in prefrontal cortex of monkeys, to advance our understanding of how behavioral flexibility is implemented by prefrontal neurons in general, and to model neural signals in the healthy brain that may be disrupted to produce cognitive control deficits in schizophrenia. We found that the neural representation of stimuli in prefrontal cortex is strongly biased toward stimuli that inhibit prepotent or automatic responses. We also found that population signals encoding different stimuli were modulated to overlap in time specifically in the case that information from multiple stimuli had to be integrated to select a conditional response. Finally, population signals relating to the motor response were biased toward less frequent and therefore less automatic actions. These data relate neuronal activity patterns in prefrontal cortex to logical information processing operations required for cognitive control, and they characterize neural events that may be disrupted in schizophrenia. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Functional imaging studies have demonstrated that cognitive control deficits in schizophrenia are associated with reduced activation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (MacDonald et al., 2005). However, these data do not reveal how the disease has disrupted the function of prefrontal neurons to produce the observed deficits in cognitive control. Relating cognitive control to neurophysiological signals at a cellular level in prefrontal cortex is a necessary first step toward understanding how disruption of these signals could lead to cognitive control failure in neuropsychiatric disease. To that end, we translated a task that measures cognitive control deficits in patients with schizophrenia to monkeys and describe here how neural signals in prefrontal cortex relate to performance.


Subject(s)
Cognition/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/cytology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Animals , Cues , Databases, Factual , Macaca mulatta , Male , Mental Processes/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Reaction Time/physiology , Schizophrenic Psychology , Signal Transduction/physiology
9.
J Neurosci ; 34(36): 11972-83, 2014 Sep 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25186744

ABSTRACT

We determined the encoding properties of single cells and the decoding accuracy of cell populations in the medial premotor cortex (MPC) of Rhesus monkeys to represent in a time-varying fashion the duration and serial order of six intervals produced rhythmically during a synchronization-continuation tapping task. We found that MPC represented the temporal and sequential structure of rhythmic movements by activating small ensembles of neurons that encoded the duration or the serial order in rapid succession, so that the pattern of active neurons changed dramatically within each interval. Interestingly, the width of the encoding or decoding function for serial order increased as a function of duration. Finally, we found that the strength of correlation in spontaneous activity of the individual cells varied as a function of the timing of their recruitment. These results demonstrate the existence of dynamic representations in MPC for the duration and serial order of intervals produced rhythmically and suggest that this dynamic code depends on ensembles of interconnected neurons that provide a strong synaptic drive to the next ensemble in a consecutive chain of neural events.


Subject(s)
Motor Cortex/physiology , Motor Skills , Animals , Brain Mapping , Macaca mulatta , Male , Motor Cortex/cytology , Movement , Neurons/physiology , Periodicity
10.
Front Neurosci ; 8: 245, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25157217

ABSTRACT

Traditionally, the neurophysiological mechanisms of cognitive processing have been investigated at the single cell level. Here we show that the dynamic, millisecond-by-millisecond, interactions between neuronal events measured by local field potentials are modulated in an orderly fashion by key task variables of a space categorization task performed by monkeys. These interactions were stronger during periods of higher cognitive load and varied in sign (positive, negative). They were observed both within area 7a of the posterior parietal cortex and between symmetric 7a areas of the two hemispheres. Time lags for maximum interactions were longer for opposite- vs. same-hemisphere recordings, and lags for negative interactions were longer than for positive interactions in both recording sites. These findings underscore the involvement of dynamic neuronal interactions in cognitive processing within and across hemispheres. They also provide accurate estimates of lags in callosal interactions, very comparable to similar estimates of callosal conduction delays derived from neuroanatomical measurements (Caminiti et al., 2013).

11.
Nat Neurosci ; 16(10): 1484-91, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23995071

ABSTRACT

Prefrontal cortex influences behavior largely through its connections with other association cortices; however, the nature of the information conveyed by prefrontal output signals and what effect these signals have on computations performed by target structures is largely unknown. To address these questions, we simultaneously recorded the activity of neurons in prefrontal and posterior parietal cortices of monkeys performing a rule-based spatial categorization task. Parietal cortex receives direct prefrontal input, and parietal neurons, like their prefrontal counterparts, exhibit signals that reflect rule-based cognitive processing in this task. By analyzing rapid fluctuations in the cognitive information encoded by activity in the two areas, we obtained evidence that signals reflecting rule-dependent categories were selectively transmitted in a top-down direction from prefrontal to parietal neurons, suggesting that prefrontal output is important for the executive control of distributed cognitive processing.


Subject(s)
Cognition/physiology , Executive Function/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Parietal Lobe/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Animals , Macaca mulatta , Male , Neural Pathways/physiology , Photic Stimulation/methods , Prefrontal Cortex/cytology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology
12.
Front Integr Neurosci ; 6: 112, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23355813

ABSTRACT

Perhaps the simplest and most complete description of the cerebral cortex is that it is a sensorimotor controller whose primary purpose is to represent stimuli and movements, and adaptively control the mapping between them. However, in order to think, the cerebral cortex has to generate patterns of neuronal activity that encode abstract, generalized information independently of ongoing sensorimotor events. A critical question confronting cognitive systems neuroscience at present therefore is how neural signals encoding abstract information emerge within the sensorimotor control networks of the brain. In this review, we approach that question in the context of the neural representation of space in posterior parietal cortex of non-human primates. We describe evidence indicating that parietal cortex generates a hierarchy of spatial representations with three basic levels: including (1) sensorimotor signals that are tightly coupled to stimuli or movements, (2) sensorimotor signals modified in strength or timing to mediate cognition (examples include attention, working memory, and decision-processing), as well as (3) signals that encode frankly abstract spatial information (such as spatial relationships or categories) generalizing across a wide diversity of specific stimulus conditions. Here we summarize the evidence for this hierarchy, and consider data showing that signals at higher levels derive from signals at lower levels. That in turn could help characterize neural mechanisms that derive a capacity for abstraction from sensorimotor experience.

13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 107(52): 22677-81, 2010 Dec 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21149720

ABSTRACT

We studied visual perception using an annular random-dot motion stimulus called the racetrack. We recorded neural activity using magnetoencephalography while subjects viewed variants of this stimulus that contained no inherent motion or various degrees of embedded motion. Subjects reported seeing rotary motion during viewing of all stimuli. We found that, in the absence of any motion signals, patterns of brain activity differed between states of motion perception and nonperception. Furthermore, when subjects perceived motion, activity states within the brain did not differ across stimuli of different amounts of embedded motion. In contrast, we found that during periods of nonperception brain-activity states varied with the amount of motion signal embedded in the stimulus. Taken together, these results suggest that during perception the brain may lock into a stable state in which lower-level signals are suppressed.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Magnetoencephalography/methods , Motion Perception/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Brain Mapping , Female , Humans , Male , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Visual Pathways/physiology
14.
J Neurosci ; 30(35): 11640-53, 2010 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20810885

ABSTRACT

We characterized the temporal dynamics of population activity in parietal cortex of monkeys as they solved a spatial cognitive problem posed by an object construction task. We applied pattern classification techniques to characterize patterns of activity coding object-centered side, a task-defined variable specifying whether an object component was located on the left or right side of a reference object, regardless of its retinocentric position. During a period in which the value of object-centered side, as defined by task events, remained constant, parietal cortex represented this variable using a dynamic neural code by activating neurons with the same spatial preference in rapid succession so that the pattern of active neurons changed dramatically while the spatial information they collectively encoded remained stable. Furthermore, if the neurons shared the same spatial preference, then their pretrial activity (measured before objects were shown) was correlated to a degree that scaled as a positive linear function of how close together in time the neurons would be activated later in the trial. Finally, we found that while parietal cortex represented task-critical spatial information using a dynamic neural code, it simultaneously represented task-irrelevant spatial information using a stationary neural code. These data demonstrate that dynamic spatial representations exist in parietal cortex, provide novel insight into the synaptic mechanisms that generate them, and suggest they may preferentially encode task-critical spatial information.


Subject(s)
Parietal Lobe/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Photic Stimulation/methods , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Space Perception/physiology , Animals , Macaca mulatta , Male , Reaction Time/physiology , Time Factors
15.
Eur J Neurosci ; 31(12): 2320-40, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20550568

ABSTRACT

In human and nonhuman primates parietal cortex is formed by a multiplicity of areas. For those of the superior parietal lobule (SPL) there exists a certain homology between man and macaques. As a consequence, optic ataxia, a disturbed visual control of hand reaching, has similar features in man and monkeys. Establishing such correspondence has proven difficult for the areas of the inferior parietal lobule (IPL). This difficulty depends on many factors. First, no physiological information is available in man on the dynamic properties of cells in the IPL. Second, the number of IPL areas identified in the monkey is paradoxically higher than that so far described in man, although this issue will probably be reconsidered in future years, thanks to comparative imaging studies. Third, the consequences of parietal lesions in monkeys do not always match those observed in humans. This is another paradox if one considers that, in certain cases, the functional properties of neurons in the monkey's IPL would predict the presence of behavioral skills, such as construction capacity, that however do not seem to emerge in the wild. Therefore, constructional apraxia, which is well characterized in man, has never been described in monkeys and apes. Finally, only certain aspects, i.e. hand directional hypokinesia and gaze apraxia (Balint's psychic paralysis of gaze), of the multifaceted syndrome hemispatial neglect have been described in monkeys. These similarities, differences and paradoxes, among many others, make the study of the evolution and function of parietal cortex a challenging case.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Parietal Lobe/anatomy & histology , Parietal Lobe/physiopathology , Perceptual Disorders/physiopathology , Animals , Cognition Disorders/pathology , Cognition Disorders/physiopathology , Humans , Movement Disorders/pathology , Movement Disorders/physiopathology , Parietal Lobe/pathology , Parietal Lobe/physiology , Perceptual Disorders/pathology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Syndrome , Visual Fields
16.
Exp Brain Res ; 202(1): 121-7, 2010 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20012531

ABSTRACT

Many factors can influence, or bias, human decision making. A considerable amount of research has investigated the neural correlates of such biases, mostly correlating hemodynamic responses in brain areas with some aspect of the decision. These studies, typically done using functional magnetic resonance imaging or positron emission tomography, have provided useful information about the location of processing in the brain. However, comparatively little research has examined when these processes occur. The present experiment addressed this question by using magnetoencephalography (MEG) to record brain activity while subjects chose preferred options from decision sets. We found that MEG signal deviations for biased decisions occurred as early as 250-750 ms following stimulus onset. Such deviations occurred earliest in sensors over the right anterior cortex. These findings improve our understanding of temporal dynamics of decision biases and suggest ways that existing explanations for this bias could be refined.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Choice Behavior/physiology , Decision Making/physiology , Adult , Female , Humans , Magnetoencephalography , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Reaction Time , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Time Factors
17.
Cortex ; 45(3): 432-41, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18640669

ABSTRACT

In this study we examined the differential contribution of superior parietal cortex (SPC) and caudal dorsal-lateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) to drawing geometrical shapes. Monkeys were trained to draw triangles, squares, trapezoids and inverted triangles while we recorded the activity of small ensembles of neurons in caudal area 46 and areas 5 and 2 of parietal cortex. We analyzed the drawing factors encoded by individual neurons by fitting a step-wise general-linear model using as our dependent variable the firing rate averaged over segments of the produced trajectories. This analysis demonstrated that both cognitive (shape and segment serial position) and motor (maximum speed, position and direction of segment) factors modulated the activity of individual neurons. Furthermore, SPC had an enriched representation of both shape and motor factors, with the motor enrichment being stronger than the shape enrichment. Following this we used the activity in the simultaneously recorded neural ensembles to predict the hand velocity. In these analyses we found that the prediction of the hand velocity was better when we estimated different linear decoding functions for each shape than when we estimated a single function across shapes, although it was a subtle effect. Furthermore, we also found that ensembles of caudal dlPFC neurons carried considerable information about hand velocity, a purely motor factor. However, the SPC ensembles carried more information at the ensemble level as a function of the ensemble size than the caudal dlPFC ensembles, although the differences were not dramatic. Finally, an analysis of the response latencies of individual neurons showed that the caudal dlPFC representation was more sensory than the SPC representation, which was equally sensory and motor. Thus, this neurophysiological evidence suggests that both SPC and caudal dlPFC have a role in drawing, but that SPC plays a larger role in both the cognitive and the motor components.


Subject(s)
Hand/physiology , Imitative Behavior/physiology , Movement/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Parietal Lobe/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Cognition/physiology , Electrophysiology/methods , Functional Laterality/physiology , Macaca mulatta , Male , Motor Skills/physiology , Parietal Lobe/cytology , Prefrontal Cortex/cytology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology
18.
J Neurosci ; 28(20): 5218-28, 2008 May 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18480278

ABSTRACT

The parietal cortex contains representations of space in multiple coordinate systems including retina-, head-, body-, and world-based systems. Previously, we found that when monkeys are required to perform spatial computations on objects, many neurons in parietal area 7a represent position in an object-centered coordinate system as well. Because visual information enters the brain in a retina-centered reference frame, generation of an object-centered reference requires the brain to perform computation on the visual input. We provide evidence that area 7a contains a correlate of that computation. Specifically, area 7a contains neurons that code information in retina- and object-centered coordinate systems. The information in retina-centered coordinates emerges first, followed by the information in object-centered coordinates. We found that the strength and accuracy of these representations is correlated across trials. Finally, we found that retina-centered information could be used to predict subsequent object-centered signals, but not vice versa. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that either area 7a, or an area that precedes area 7a in the visual processing hierarchy, is performing the retina- to object-centered transformation.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials/physiology , Nerve Net/physiology , Orientation/physiology , Parietal Lobe/physiology , Space Perception/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Animals , Brain Mapping , Cognition/physiology , Linear Models , Macaca mulatta , Male , Neural Pathways/physiology , Neuropsychological Tests , Parietal Lobe/anatomy & histology , Photic Stimulation , Retina/physiology , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Time Factors , Visual Fields , Visual Pathways/physiology
19.
Cereb Cortex ; 17(12): 2914-32, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17389630

ABSTRACT

The brain computes spatial relationships as necessary to achieve behavioral goals. Loss of this spatial cognitive ability after damage to posterior parietal cortex may contribute to constructional apraxia, a syndrome in which a patient's ability to reproduce spatial relationships between the parts of an object is disrupted. To explore neural correlates of object-relative spatial representation, we recorded neural activity in parietal area 7a of monkeys performing an object construction task. We found that neurons were activated as a function of the spatial relationship between a task-critical coordinate and a reference object. Individual neurons exhibited an object-relative spatial preference, such that different neural populations were activated when the spatial coordinate was located to the left or right of the reference object. In each case, the representation was robust to translation of the reference object, and neurons maintained their object-relative preference when the position of the object varied relative to the angle of gaze and viewer-centered frames of reference. This provides evidence that the activity of a subpopulation of parietal neurons active in the construction task represented relative position as referenced to an object and not absolute position with respect to the viewer.


Subject(s)
Evoked Potentials, Visual/physiology , Neurons, Afferent/physiology , Orientation/physiology , Parietal Lobe/physiology , Space Perception/physiology , Task Performance and Analysis , Animals , Brain Mapping , Macaca mulatta , Male
20.
Neuron ; 47(6): 885-91, 2005 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16157282

ABSTRACT

Dynamic neural processing unrelated to changes in sensory input or motor output is likely to be a hallmark of cognitive operations. Here we show that neural representations of space in parietal cortex are dynamic while monkeys perform a spatial cognitive operation on a static visual stimulus. We recorded neural activity in area 7a during a visual maze task in which monkeys mentally followed a path without moving their eyes. We found that the direction of the followed path could be recovered from neuronal population activity. When the monkeys covertly processed a path that turned, the population representation of path direction shifted in the direction of the turn. This neural population dynamic took place during a period of unchanging visual input and showed characteristics of both serial and parallel processing. The data suggest that the dynamic evolution of parietal neuronal activity is associated with the progression of spatial cognitive operations.


Subject(s)
Cognition/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Nonlinear Dynamics , Parietal Lobe/cytology , Spatial Behavior/physiology , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Macaca mulatta , Maze Learning/physiology , Photic Stimulation/methods
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