4.7 Article

Rule Encoding in Orbitofrontal Cortex and Striatum Guides Selection

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 36, Issue 44, Pages 11223-11237

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1766-16.2016

Keywords

decision making; executive control; macaque; orbitofrontal cortex; single unit; striatum

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 DA038106, T32-EY007125]

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Active maintenance of rules, like other executive functions, is often thought to be the domain of a discrete executive system. Analternative view is that rule maintenance is a broadly distributed function relying on widespread cortical and subcortical circuits. Tentative evidence supporting this view comes from research showing some rule selectivity in the orbitofrontal cortex and dorsal striatum. We recorded in these regions and in the ventral striatum, which has not been associated previously with rule representation, as macaques performed a Wisconsin Card Sorting Task. We found robust encoding of rule category (color vs shape) and rule identity (six possible rules) in all three regions. Rule identity modulated responses to potential choice targets, suggesting that rule information guides behavior by highlighting choice targets. The effects that we observed were not explained by differences in behavioral performance across rules and thus cannot be attributed to reward expectation. Our results suggest that rule maintenance and rule-guided selection of options are distributed processes and provide new insight into orbital and striatal contributions to executive control.

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