Altered task demands lead to a division of labour for sensory and cognitive processing in the middle temporal area

Author:

Scott Hayden123ORCID,Wimmer Klaus4,Pasternak Tatiana23,Snyder Adam C.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Brain and Cognitive Sciences University of Rochester Rochester New York 14627 USA

2. Center for Visual Science University of Rochester Rochester New York 14620 USA

3. Neuroscience University of Rochester Rochester New York 14620 USA

4. Centre de Recerca Matemàtica (CRM) Barcelona 08193 Spain

Abstract

AbstractNeurons in the primate middle temporal (MT) area signal information about visual motion and work together with the lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) to support memory‐guided comparisons of visual motion direction. These areas are reciprocally connected, and both contain neurons that signal visual motion direction in the strength of their responses. Previously, LPFC was shown to display marked changes in stimulus coding with altered task demands, including changes in selectivity for motion direction, trial‐to‐trial variability in responses and comparison effects. Since MT and LPFC are directly interconnected, we sought to determine if MT neurons display similar dependence on task demands. We found that active participation in a motion direction comparison task affected both sensory and nonsensory activity in MT neurons. In fact, neurons that became less selective for motion direction during the active task showed increased signalling for cognitive aspects of the task. This heterogeneity in neural modification with heightened task demands suggests a division of labour in MT, whereby sensory and cognitive signals are both heightened in different subpopulations of neurons.

Funder

Agencia Estatal de Investigación

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

Brain and Behavior Research Foundation

National Eye Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Neuroscience

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