Coherent mapping of position and head direction across auditory and visual cortex

Author:

Mertens Paul E C1ORCID,Marchesi Pietro1ORCID,Ruikes Thijs R1ORCID,Oude Lohuis Matthijs12ORCID,Krijger Quincy1,Pennartz Cyriel M A13ORCID,Lansink Carien S13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences, University of Amsterdam Center for Neuroscience, Faculty of Science, , Science Park 904, Amsterdam 1098 XH, The   Netherlands

2. Champalimaud Neuroscience Programme, Champalimaud Foundation , Lisbon, Portugal

3. University of Amsterdam Research Priority Program Brain and Cognition, , Science Park 904, Amsterdam 1098 XH, The   Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Neurons in primary visual cortex (V1) may not only signal current visual input but also relevant contextual information such as reward expectancy and the subject’s spatial position. Such contextual representations need not be restricted to V1 but could participate in a coherent mapping throughout sensory cortices. Here, we show that spiking activity coherently represents a location-specific mapping across auditory cortex (AC) and lateral, secondary visual cortex (V2L) of freely moving rats engaged in a sensory detection task on a figure-8 maze. Single-unit activity of both areas showed extensive similarities in terms of spatial distribution, reliability, and position coding. Importantly, reconstructions of subject position based on spiking activity displayed decoding errors that were correlated between areas. Additionally, we found that head direction, but not locomotor speed or head angular velocity, was an important determinant of activity in AC and V2L. By contrast, variables related to the sensory task cues or to trial correctness and reward were not markedly encoded in AC and V2L. We conclude that sensory cortices participate in coherent, multimodal representations of the subject’s sensory-specific location. These may provide a common reference frame for distributed cortical sensory and motor processes and may support crossmodal predictive processing.

Funder

European Union’s Horizon 2020 Framework Program for Research and Innovation under the Human Brain Project SGA3

Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research VENI Grant

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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