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Reliable population code for subjective economic value from heterogeneous neuronal signals in primate orbitofrontal cortex

Simone Ferrari-Toniolo, Wolfram Schultz

2023Neuron19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Behavior-related neuronal signals often vary between neurons, which might reflect the unreliability of individual neurons or a truly heterogeneous code. This notion may also apply to economic ("value-based") choices and the underlying reward signals. Reward value is subjective and can be described by a nonlinearly weighted magnitude (utility) and probability. Defining subjective values relies on the continuity axiom, whose testing involves structured variations of a wide range of reward magnitudes and probabilities. Axiom compliance demonstrates understanding of the stimuli and the meaningful character of choices. Using these tests, we investigated the encoding of subjective economic value by neurons in a key economic-decision structure of the monkey brain, the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC). We found that individual neurons carry heterogeneous neuronal value signals that largely fail to match the animal's choices. However, neuronal population signals matched the animal's choices well, suggesting accurate subjective economic value encoding by a heterogeneous population of unreliable neurons.

Topics & Concepts

Orbitofrontal cortexPrimateNeurosciencePopulationCortex (anatomy)PsychologyValue (mathematics)Code (set theory)Nonhuman primateBiologyComputer sciencePrefrontal cortexEvolutionary biologyMedicineCognitionMachine learningSet (abstract data type)Environmental healthProgramming languageNeural dynamics and brain functionMemory and Neural MechanismsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies
Reliable population code for subjective economic value from heterogeneous neuronal signals in primate orbitofrontal cortex | Litcius