Reversible Fronto-occipitotemporal Signaling Complements Task Encoding and Switching under Ambiguous Cues

Author:

Tsumura Kaho1,Kosugi Keita1,Hattori Yoshiki1,Aoki Ryuta2,Takeda Masaki2,Chikazoe Junichi3,Nakahara Kiyoshi2,Jimura Koji12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biosciences and Informatics, Keio University, Yokohama 223-0061, Japan

2. Research Center for Brain Communication, Kochi University of Technology, Kami 782-8502, Japan

3. Supportive Center for Brain Research, National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Okazaki 444-8585, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Adaptation to changing environments involves the appropriate extraction of environmental information to achieve a behavioral goal. It remains unclear how behavioral flexibility is guided under situations where the relevant behavior is ambiguous. Using functional brain mapping of machine learning decoders and directional functional connectivity, we show that brain-wide reversible neural signaling underpins task encoding and behavioral flexibility in ambiguously changing environments. When relevant behavior is cued ambiguously during behavioral shifting, neural coding is attenuated in distributed cortical regions, but top-down signals from the prefrontal cortex complement the coding. When behavioral shifting is cued more explicitly, modality-specialized occipitotemporal regions implement distinct neural coding about relevant behavior, and bottom-up signals from the occipitotemporal region to the prefrontal cortex supplement the behavioral shift. These results suggest that our adaptation to an ever-changing world is orchestrated by the alternation of top-down and bottom-up signaling in the fronto-occipitotemporal circuit depending on the availability of environmental information.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Takeda Science Foundation

Uehara Memorial Foundation

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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