TY - JOUR
T1 - Automatic comparison of stimulus durations in the primate prefrontal cortex
T2 - The neural basis of across-task interference
AU - Genovesio, Aldo
AU - Cirillo, Rossella
AU - Tsujimoto, Satoshi
AU - Abdellatif, Sara Mohammad
AU - Wise, Steven P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 the American Physiological Society.
PY - 2015/4/22
Y1 - 2015/4/22
N2 - Rhesus monkeys performed two tasks, both requiring a choice between a red square and a blue circle. In the duration task, the two stimuli appeared sequentially on each trial, for varying durations, and, later, during the choice phase of the task, the monkeys needed to choose the one that had lasted longer. In the matching-to-sample task, one of the two stimuli appeared twice as a sample, with durations matching those in the duration task, and the monkey needed to choose that stimulus during the choice phase. Although stimulus duration was irrelevant in the matching-to-sample task, the monkeys made twice as many errors when the second stimulus was shorter. This across-task interference supports an orderdependent model of the monkeys’ choice and reveals something about their strategy in the duration task. The monkeys tended to choose the second stimulus when its duration exceeded the first and to choose the alternative stimulus otherwise. For the duration task, this strategy obviated the need to store stimulus-duration conjunctions for both stimuli, but it generated errors on the matching-to-sample task. We examined duration coding in prefrontal neurons and confirmed that a population of cells encoded relative duration during the matching-tosample task, as expected from the order-dependent errors.
AB - Rhesus monkeys performed two tasks, both requiring a choice between a red square and a blue circle. In the duration task, the two stimuli appeared sequentially on each trial, for varying durations, and, later, during the choice phase of the task, the monkeys needed to choose the one that had lasted longer. In the matching-to-sample task, one of the two stimuli appeared twice as a sample, with durations matching those in the duration task, and the monkey needed to choose that stimulus during the choice phase. Although stimulus duration was irrelevant in the matching-to-sample task, the monkeys made twice as many errors when the second stimulus was shorter. This across-task interference supports an orderdependent model of the monkeys’ choice and reveals something about their strategy in the duration task. The monkeys tended to choose the second stimulus when its duration exceeded the first and to choose the alternative stimulus otherwise. For the duration task, this strategy obviated the need to store stimulus-duration conjunctions for both stimuli, but it generated errors on the matching-to-sample task. We examined duration coding in prefrontal neurons and confirmed that a population of cells encoded relative duration during the matching-tosample task, as expected from the order-dependent errors.
KW - Decision
KW - Interference
KW - Monkey
KW - Prefrontal
KW - Timing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84939824290&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1152/jn.00057.2015
DO - 10.1152/jn.00057.2015
M3 - Article
SN - 0022-3077
VL - 114
SP - 48
EP - 56
JO - Journal of Neurophysiology
JF - Journal of Neurophysiology
IS - 1
ER -