Stable task information from an unstable neural population

Author:

Rule Michael E1ORCID,Loback Adrianna R1,Raman Dhruva V1,Driscoll Laura N2,Harvey Christopher D3,O'Leary Timothy1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom

2. Department of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

3. Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, United States

Abstract

Over days and weeks, neural activity representing an animal’s position and movement in sensorimotor cortex has been found to continually reconfigure or ‘drift’ during repeated trials of learned tasks, with no obvious change in behavior. This challenges classical theories, which assume stable engrams underlie stable behavior. However, it is not known whether this drift occurs systematically, allowing downstream circuits to extract consistent information. Analyzing long-term calcium imaging recordings from posterior parietal cortex in mice (Mus musculus), we show that drift is systematically constrained far above chance, facilitating a linear weighted readout of behavioral variables. However, a significant component of drift continually degrades a fixed readout, implying that drift is not confined to a null coding space. We calculate the amount of plasticity required to compensate drift independently of any learning rule, and find that this is within physiologically achievable bounds. We demonstrate that a simple, biologically plausible local learning rule can achieve these bounds, accurately decoding behavior over many days.

Funder

Human Frontier Science Program

H2020 European Research Council

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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