Neuron
Volume 100, Issue 4, 21 November 2018, Pages 900-915.e9
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Article
Intermingled Ensembles in Visual Association Cortex Encode Stimulus Identity or Predicted Outcome

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2018.09.024Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Unique ensembles in visual association cortex encode stimulus identity or value

  • Neurons encoding predicted value are sensitive to cue saliency and reward history

  • Neurons encoding stimulus identity are insensitive to cue saliency and reward history

  • Neurons recruited with new learning are integrated into the value-coding ensemble

Summary

The response of a cortical neuron to a motivationally salient visual stimulus can reflect a prediction of the associated outcome, a sensitivity to low-level stimulus features, or a mix of both. To distinguish between these alternatives, we monitored responses to visual stimuli in the same lateral visual association cortex neurons across weeks, both prior to and after reassignment of the outcome associated with each stimulus. We observed correlated ensembles of neurons with visual responses that either tracked the same predicted outcome, the same stimulus orientation, or that emerged only following new learning. Visual responses of outcome-tracking neurons encoded “value,” as they demonstrated a response bias to salient, food-predicting cues and sensitivity to reward history and hunger state. Strikingly, these attributes were not evident in neurons that tracked stimulus orientation. Our findings suggest a division of labor between intermingled ensembles in visual association cortex that encode predicted value or stimulus identity.

Keywords

visual association cortex
mouse postrhinal cortex
two-photon calcium imaging
long-term imaging
food cue
reward history
noise correlations
cortical ensembles
reversal learning
predicted value

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