Neurons in Monkey Prefrontal Cortex Whose Activity Tracks the Progress of a Three-Step Self-Ordered Task
Open Access
- 1 September 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 92 (3), 1524-1535
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.01110.2003
Abstract
The self-ordered task is a powerful tool for the analysis of dorsal prefrontal deficits. Each trial consists of a number of steps, and subjects must remember their choices in previous steps. The task becomes more difficult as the number of objects to be remembered increases. We recorded the activity of 156 neurons in the mid-dorsal prefrontal cortex of two rhesus monkeys performing an oculomotor version of the task. Although the task requires working memory, there was no convincing evidence for activity selective for the working memory of the objects that the monkey had to remember. Instead, nearly one-half of neurons (47%, 74/156) showed activity that was modulated according to the step of the task in any one or more task periods. Although the monkey's reward also increased with step, the neurons exhibited little or no step modulation in a reward control task in which reward increased without a concurrent increase in task difficulty. The activity of some neurons was also selective for the location of saccade target that the monkey voluntarily chose. Neurons showed less step modulation in error trials, and there was no increase between the second and third step responses on trials in which the error was on the third step. These results suggest that the mid-dorsal prefrontal cortex contributes to the self-ordered task, not by providing an object working memory signal, but by regulating some general aspect of the performance in the difficult task.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Neural Basis for General IntelligenceScience, 2000
- Organization of working memory within the human prefrontal cortex: a PET study of self-ordered object working memoryNeuropsychologia, 2000
- Detection, classification, and superposition resolution of action potentials in multiunit single-channel recordings by an on-line real-time neural networkIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1997
- A Parametric Study of Prefrontal Cortex Involvement in Human Working MemoryNeuroImage, 1997
- Visual, presaccadic, and cognitive activation of single neurons in monkey lateral intraparietal areaJournal of Neurophysiology, 1996
- Neural systems engaged by planning: a PET study of the Tower of London taskNeuropsychologia, 1996
- Discriminative Cues Indicating Reward Magnitude Continue to Determine Reaction Time of Rats Following Lesions of the Nucleus AccumbensEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 1995
- Prefrontal cortex and spatial sequencing in macaque monkeyExperimental Brain Research, 1989
- Participation of prefrontal neurons in the preparation of visually guided eye movements in the rhesus monkeyJournal of Neurophysiology, 1989
- Mnemonic coding of visual space in the monkey's dorsolateral prefrontal cortexJournal of Neurophysiology, 1989