Dynamics and dimensionality of information representation for higher cognitive function

<p>Many cognitive functions are thought to rely on higher brain regions, in particular the prefrontal cortex. However, neural processing in prefrontal cortex can be notoriously complex, both in single neurons as well as at the population level. This thesis aims to investigate some of the repre...

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Main Author: Wasmuht, DF
Other Authors: Stokes, M
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
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author Wasmuht, DF
author2 Stokes, M
author_facet Stokes, M
Wasmuht, DF
author_sort Wasmuht, DF
collection OXFORD
description <p>Many cognitive functions are thought to rely on higher brain regions, in particular the prefrontal cortex. However, neural processing in prefrontal cortex can be notoriously complex, both in single neurons as well as at the population level. This thesis aims to investigate some of the representations and dynamics that emerge from the concerted activity of many neurons during cognitive processing. All experiments in this thesis involved the analysis of electrophysiological recordings from non-human primates taken while the animals performed complex cognitive tasks involving working memory and decision making components. In the first experiment, I analysed prefrontal cortex recordings from animals trained on a cognitively demanding dual-task that required simultaneous performance of two overlapping tasks. I found that many neurons were tuned to mixtures of features from both tasks, thus indicating possible interference on the neural level. However, despite mixed responses in single neurons, population level representations of the two tasks were nearly orthogonal effectively resolving interference between task representations. The temporal dynamics of the dual-task seemed to play a critical role in this orthogonalization process. In a second experiment I took a closer look at the temporal dynamics during cognitive processing by analysing recordings from multiple brain regions while animals performed a working memory task. I found that the heterogeneous dynamics of single neurons i.e. dynamic or stable delay coding could be predicted by their intrinsic temporal firing stability. In the last experiment I investigated how correlations between neurons influence the processing of decision related variables in single neurons. I found that decision related activity in response to a perceptually ambiguous stimulus was predicted by different timescales of interneuronal correlations. Finally, I summarize the major findings of this thesis and discuss future lines of research that aim to explore the circuit mechanisms underlying the observed task representations and how they might arise during learning.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:0e271c8a-6c26-464e-bb16-18f756fc5d382024-12-01T12:15:40ZDynamics and dimensionality of information representation for higher cognitive functionThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:0e271c8a-6c26-464e-bb16-18f756fc5d38NeuroscienceEnglishHyrax Deposit2019Wasmuht, DFStokes, MKrug, K<p>Many cognitive functions are thought to rely on higher brain regions, in particular the prefrontal cortex. However, neural processing in prefrontal cortex can be notoriously complex, both in single neurons as well as at the population level. This thesis aims to investigate some of the representations and dynamics that emerge from the concerted activity of many neurons during cognitive processing. All experiments in this thesis involved the analysis of electrophysiological recordings from non-human primates taken while the animals performed complex cognitive tasks involving working memory and decision making components. In the first experiment, I analysed prefrontal cortex recordings from animals trained on a cognitively demanding dual-task that required simultaneous performance of two overlapping tasks. I found that many neurons were tuned to mixtures of features from both tasks, thus indicating possible interference on the neural level. However, despite mixed responses in single neurons, population level representations of the two tasks were nearly orthogonal effectively resolving interference between task representations. The temporal dynamics of the dual-task seemed to play a critical role in this orthogonalization process. In a second experiment I took a closer look at the temporal dynamics during cognitive processing by analysing recordings from multiple brain regions while animals performed a working memory task. I found that the heterogeneous dynamics of single neurons i.e. dynamic or stable delay coding could be predicted by their intrinsic temporal firing stability. In the last experiment I investigated how correlations between neurons influence the processing of decision related variables in single neurons. I found that decision related activity in response to a perceptually ambiguous stimulus was predicted by different timescales of interneuronal correlations. Finally, I summarize the major findings of this thesis and discuss future lines of research that aim to explore the circuit mechanisms underlying the observed task representations and how they might arise during learning.</p>
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Wasmuht, DF
Dynamics and dimensionality of information representation for higher cognitive function
title Dynamics and dimensionality of information representation for higher cognitive function
title_full Dynamics and dimensionality of information representation for higher cognitive function
title_fullStr Dynamics and dimensionality of information representation for higher cognitive function
title_full_unstemmed Dynamics and dimensionality of information representation for higher cognitive function
title_short Dynamics and dimensionality of information representation for higher cognitive function
title_sort dynamics and dimensionality of information representation for higher cognitive function
topic Neuroscience
work_keys_str_mv AT wasmuhtdf dynamicsanddimensionalityofinformationrepresentationforhighercognitivefunction