4.5 Article

Cognition and the single neuron: How cell types construct the dynamic computations of frontal cortex

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN NEUROBIOLOGY
Volume 77, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CURRENT BIOLOGY LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.conb.2022.102630

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health
  2. [R01DA038209]
  3. [R01MH097061]

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The frontal cortex, responsible for advanced cognitive abilities, shows diverse neural activity. Two approaches, one focusing on dynamic trajectories and the other on cell-type diversity, have been successful in addressing this challenge. This study proposes a combination of population and cell-type-specific approaches, suggesting cell-type constraints inherited through evolution create the foundation for frontal population dynamics.
Frontal cortex is thought to underlie many advanced cognitive capacities, from self-control to long term planning. Reflecting these diverse demands, frontal neural activity is notoriously idiosyncratic, with tuning properties that are correlated with endless numbers of behavioral and task features. This menagerie of tuning has made it difficult to extract organizing principles that govern frontal neural activity. Here, we contrast two successful yet seemingly incompatible approaches that have begun to address this challenge. Inspired by the indecipherability of single-neuron tuning, the first approach casts frontal computations as dynamical trajectories traversed by arbitrary mixtures of neurons. The second approach, by contrast, attempts to explain the functional diversity of frontal activity with the biological diversity of cortical cell-types. Motivated by the recent discovery of functional clusters in frontal neurons, we propose a consilience between these population and cell-type-specific approaches to neural computations, advancing the conjecture that evolutionarily inherited cell-type constraints create the scaffold within which frontal population dynamics must operate.

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