Context-dependent duration signals in the primate prefrontal cortex

ALDO GENOVESIO, Lucia K. Seitz, Satoshi Tsujimoto, Steven P. Wise

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo su rivistaArticolo in rivistapeer review

Abstract

The activity of some prefrontal (PF) cortex neurons distinguishes short from long time intervals. Here, we examined whether this property reflected a general timing mechanism or one dependent on behavioral context. In one task, monkeys discriminated the relative duration of 2 stimuli; in the other, they discriminated the relative distance of 2 stimuli from a fixed reference point. Both tasks had a pre-cue period (interval 1) and a delay period (interval 2) with no discriminant stimulus. Interval 1 elapsed before the presentation of the first discriminant stimulus, and interval 2 began after that stimulus. Both intervals had durations of either 400 or 800 ms. Most PF neurons distinguished short from long durations in one task or interval, but not in the others. When neurons did signal something about duration for both intervals, they did so in an uncorrelated or weakly correlated manner. These results demonstrate a high degree of context dependency in PF time processing. The PF, therefore, does not appear to signal durations abstractedly, as would be expected of a general temporal encoder, but instead does so in a highly context-dependent manner, both within and between tasks.
Lingua originaleInglese
pagine (da-a)3345-3356
Numero di pagine12
RivistaCerebral Cortex
Volume26
Numero di pubblicazione8
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 2016

Keywords

  • dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
  • duration
  • executive function
  • monitoring
  • periprincipal prefrontal cortex
  • temporal processing
  • timing
  • medicine (all)
  • cognitive neuroscience
  • cellular and molecular neuroscience

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