| Literature DB >> 30590542 |
Radhika Madhavan1, Arjun K Bansal1,2, Joseph R Madsen1, Alexandra J Golby3, Travis S Tierney3, Emad N Eskandar4, William S Anderson5, Gabriel Kreiman1,6.
Abstract
Rapid and flexible learning during behavioral choices is critical to our daily endeavors and constitutes a hallmark of dynamic reasoning. An important paradigm to examine flexible behavior involves learning new arbitrary associations mapping visual inputs to motor outputs. We conjectured that visuomotor rules are instantiated by translating visual signals into actions through dynamic interactions between visual, frontal and motor cortex. We evaluated the neural representation of such visuomotor rules by performing intracranial field potential recordings in epilepsy subjects during a rule-learning delayed match-to-behavior task. Learning new visuomotor mappings led to the emergence of specific responses associating visual signals with motor outputs in 3 anatomical clusters in frontal, anteroventral temporal and posterior parietal cortex. After learning, mapping selective signals during the delay period showed interactions with visual and motor signals. These observations provide initial steps towards elucidating the dynamic circuits underlying flexible behavior and how communication between subregions of frontal, temporal, and parietal cortex leads to rapid learning of task-relevant choices.Entities:
Keywords: frontal cortex; human neurophysiology; reinforcement learning; visual cortex
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30590542 PMCID: PMC6917519 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhy333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357