4.8 Article

Perceptual learning as a result of concerted changes in prefrontal and visual cortex

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 20, Pages 4521-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.08.007

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31930049, 31671079]

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Neural coding in V4 and PFC during visual perceptual learning shows enhanced components related to target features and behavioral choices, indicating the importance of concurrent perceptual and cognitive learning processes.
Our perceptual ability remarkably improves with training. Some studies on visual perceptual learning have shown refined neural representation of the trained stimulus in the visual cortex, whereas others have exclusively argued for improved readout and decision-making processes in the frontoparietal cortex. The mixed results have rendered the underlying neural mechanisms puzzling and hotly debated. By simultaneously recording from monkey visual area V4 and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (PFC) implanted with microelectrode arrays, we dissected learning-induced cortical changes over the course of training the monkeys in a global form detection task. Decoding analysis dissociated two distinct components of neuronal population codes that were progressively and markedly enhanced in both V4 and PFC. One component was closely related to the target stimulus feature and was subject to task-dependent top-down modulation; it emerged earlier in V4 than PFC and its enhancement was specific to the trained configuration of the target stimulus. The other component of the neural code was entirely related to the animal's behavioral choice; it emerged earlier in PFC than V4 and its enhancement completely generalized to an untrained stimulus configuration. These results implicate two concurrent and synergistic learning processes: a perceptual process that is specific to the details of the trained stimulus feature and a cognitive process that is dependent on the total amount of learning experience in the trained task. When combined, these two learning processes were well predictive of the animal's learning behavior.

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