Author:
Kamigaki Tsukasa,Fukushima Tetsuya,Miyashita Yasushi
Abstract
Abstract
Cognitive flexibility arises from our ability to shift behaviors depending on demand changes. Behavioral shifting recruits both a preparatory process for an upcoming behavior and an execution process for the actual behavior. Although neuroimaging studies have shown that several brain regions, including posterior parietal cortex (PPC) participated in each component process, it remains unresolved how such processes are implemented at the single-cell level or even whether these processes are distinctively carried out across microstructures in such regions. By recording single-unit activity from PPC of two monkeys performing an analog of the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, we found that, in the execution process, two types of neurons exhibited activity modulation depending on whether shift was (shift trial) or was not required (nonshift trial): one type showing larger activity and the other showing smaller activity in the shift trial than in the nonshift trial. In the preparatory process, in contrast, the population activity of both types became larger in the shift trial than in the nonshift trial. The majority of both types exhibited shift-related activity modulation in both processes, whereas the remaining was specialized in the execution process. The former and the latter neurons were spatially intermingled within PPC. Significantly, when the animals performed set shifting spontaneously in prospect of a demand change, the shift-related activity modulation still emerged in both processes. We suggest that both execution and preparation signals are represented within PPC, and that these signals reflect behavioral shifting mechanisms that can be driven by either internal or external triggers.
Reference53 articles.
1. Shifting intentional set: Exploring the dynamic control of tasks.;Allport,1994
2. Intentional maps in posterior parietal cortex.;Andersen;Annual Review of Neuroscience,2002
3. Encoding of spatial location by posterior parietal neurons.;Andersen;Science,1985
4. Wisconsin Card Sorting Test performance as a measure of frontal lobe damage.;Anderson;Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology,1991
5. Computational and neurobiological mechanisms underlying cognitive flexibility.;Badre;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, U.S.A.,2006
Cited by
15 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献