Litcius/Paper detail

Spatiotemporal refinement of signal flow through association cortex during learning

Ariel Gilad, Fritjof Helmchen

2020Nature Communications86 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Association areas in neocortex encode novel stimulus-outcome relationships, but the principles of their engagement during task learning remain elusive. Using chronic wide-field calcium imaging, we reveal two phases of spatiotemporal refinement of layer 2/3 cortical activity in mice learning whisker-based texture discrimination in the dark. Even before mice reach learning threshold, association cortex-including rostro-lateral (RL), posteromedial (PM), and retrosplenial dorsal (RD) areas-is generally suppressed early during trials (between auditory start cue and whisker-texture touch). As learning proceeds, a spatiotemporal activation sequence builds up, spreading from auditory areas to RL immediately before texture touch (whereas PM and RD remain suppressed) and continuing into barrel cortex, which eventually efficiently discriminates between textures. Additional correlation analysis substantiates this diverging learning-related refinement within association cortex. Our results indicate that a pre-learning phase of general suppression in association cortex precedes a learning-related phase of task-specific signal flow enhancement.

Topics & Concepts

NeocortexNeuroscienceAssociation (psychology)Barrel cortexPsychologyCortex (anatomy)Associative learningSensory systemBiologyComputer sciencePsychotherapistNeural dynamics and brain functionNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchAdvanced Memory and Neural Computing