4.7 Article

History-dependent variability in population dynamics during evidence accumulation in cortex

期刊

NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
卷 19, 期 12, 页码 1672-1681

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nn.4403

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资金

  1. Burroughs-Wellcome Fund Career Award at the Scientific Interface
  2. Searle Scholars Program
  3. New York Stem Cell Foundation
  4. Alfred P. Sloan Research Foundation
  5. NARSAD Brain and Behavior Research Young Investigator Award
  6. NIH grant from the NIMH BRAINS program [R01MH107620, R01NS089521]
  7. NIH grant from NINDS [R01NS089521]
  8. Stuart H.Q. & Victoria Quan Fellowship
  9. NCRR [1S10RR028832-01]

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We studied how the posterior parietal cortex combines new information with ongoing activity dynamics as mice accumulate evidence during a virtual navigation task. Using new methods to analyze population activity on single trials, we found that activity transitioned rapidly between different sets of active neurons. Each event in a trial, whether an evidence cue or a behavioral choice, caused seconds-long modifications to the probabilities that govern how one activity pattern transitions to the next, forming a short-term memory. A sequence of evidence cues triggered a chain of these modifications resulting in a signal for accumulated evidence. Multiple distinguishable activity patterns were possible for the same accumulated evidence because representations of ongoing events were influenced by previous within- and across-trial events. Therefore, evidence accumulation need not require the explicit competition between groups of neurons, as in winner-take-all models, but could instead emerge implicitly from general dynamical properties that instantiate short-term memory.

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