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Activity Subspaces in Medial Prefrontal Cortex Distinguish States of the World

Maggi, Silvia; Humphries, Mark D.

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Authors

MARK HUMPHRIES Mark.Humphries@nottingham.ac.uk
Professor of Computational Neuroscience



Abstract

Medial prefrontal cortex (mPfC) activity represents information about the state of the world, including present behavior, such as decisions, and the immediate past, such as short-term memory. Unknown is whether information about different states of the world are represented in the same mPfC neural population and, if so, how they are kept distinct. To address this, we analyze here mPfC population activity of male rats learning rules in a Y-maze, with self-initiated choice trials to an arm end followed by a self-paced return during the intertrial interval (ITI). We find that trial and ITI population activity from the same population fall into different low-dimensional subspaces. These subspaces encode different states of the world: multiple features of the task can be decoded from both trial and ITI activity, but the decoding axes for the same feature are roughly orthogonal between the two task phases, and the decodings are predominantly of features of the present during the trial but features of the preceding trial during the ITI. These subspace distinctions are carried forward into sleep, where population activity is preferentially reactivated in post-training sleep but differently for activity from the trial and ITI subspaces. Our results suggest that the problem of interference when representing different states of the world is solved in mPfC by population activity occupying different subspaces for the world states, which can be independently decoded by downstream targets and independently addressed by upstream inputs.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Activity in the medial prefrontal cortex plays a role in representing the current and past states of the world. We show that during a maze task, the activity of a single population in medial prefrontal cortex represents at least two different states of the world. These representations were sequential and sufficiently distinct that a downstream population could separately read out either state from that activity. Moreover, the activity representing different states is differently reactivated in sleep. Different world states can thus be represented in the same medial prefrontal cortex population but in such a way that prevents potentially catastrophic interference between them.

Citation

Maggi, S., & Humphries, M. D. (2022). Activity Subspaces in Medial Prefrontal Cortex Distinguish States of the World. Journal of Neuroscience, 42(20), 4131-4146. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1412-21.2022

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 13, 2022
Online Publication Date Apr 14, 2022
Publication Date May 18, 2022
Deposit Date Jan 18, 2022
Publicly Available Date Apr 14, 2022
Journal The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
Electronic ISSN 1529-2401
Publisher Society for Neuroscience
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 42
Issue 20
Pages 4131-4146
DOI https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1412-21.2022
Keywords General Neuroscience
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/7276614
Publisher URL https://www.jneurosci.org/content/42/20/4131

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