A very large number of studies have investigated the relationship between the activity of sensory neurons and behavior. The model that implicitly or explicitly guides most of that work is that single neurons are the unit of computation. The underlying hypothesis is that different groupings of neurons are responsible for each sensory, cognitive or premotor role in decision-making. However, each neuron's responses encode a unique combination of sensory and cognitive signals as well as noise, and have distinct interactions with the rest of the network. These observations, combined with the staggering flexibility of mappings from sensory stimuli to actions suggest that different weighted sums of the activity of the entire population may be more informative about sensory and behavioral variables than different groupings of neurons. This idea represents a new way of thinking about neural coding. It has important implications for the neuronal mechanisms underlying many behavioral processes, including perceptual decision-making in the primate visual system, which is our model system. This paradigm can also explain longstanding paradoxes about the aspects of the neural code that limit performance on perceptual tasks. The goal of this proposal is to identify the aspects of population activity that guide and gate perceptual decisions. We hypothesize that the sensory information that is used to flexibly guide and gate decisions is shared between populations of visual and premotor neurons. The two cornerstones of our approach are 1) to record simultaneously from groups of neurons in the middle temporal area (MT), which encodes visual motion, and in the superior colliculus (SC), whose responses are visual, oculomotor, and everything in between and 2) to use novel measures of neuronal activity that incorporate the activity of the whole population.
In Aim 1, we will compare the extent to which individual perceptual decisions can be predicted from the dominant fluctuations in population responses within MT or the SC or activity that is correlated on a trial by trial basis between the two areas.
In Aim 2, we will determine whether task-irrelevant stimulus information, which can cause large changes in the activity of sensory neurons, is filtered out by interactions between MT and the SC.
In Aim 3, we will conduct a strong test of the hypothesis that visuo-motor interactions guide perceptual decision-making by measuring the relationship between choices and interactions between MT and SC neurons with receptive fields in opposite hemifields. Together, these studies will address long-standing questions about the extent to which perception is limited by the fidelity with which stimulus information is encoded in sensory cortex or by the information that is flexibly communicated to downstream areas in a task-dependent way. More generally, this work will establish a set of experimental and data analysis techniques for revealing the relationship between neuronal populations and behavior.

Public Health Relevance

Most neurological diseases including depression, schizophrenia, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder are thought to involve networks of neurons in multiple brain areas, but very few studies have focused on how neurons in different areas interact and how these interactions are modulated by task or cognitive factors. Understanding the way that information is encoded and decoded by neuronal populations will be critical for diagnosing and developing drug therapies to treat these diseases. The proposed projects will elucidate general mechanisms for population coding as well as the relationship between the activity of groups of neurons in different areas and behavior.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01EY022930-06
Application #
9523459
Study Section
Mechanisms of Sensory, Perceptual, and Cognitive Processes Study Section (SPC)
Program Officer
Flanders, Martha C
Project Start
2013-08-01
Project End
2023-07-31
Budget Start
2018-08-01
Budget End
2019-07-31
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pittsburgh
Department
Neurosciences
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
004514360
City
Pittsburgh
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
15213
Ni, A M; Ruff, D A; Alberts, J J et al. (2018) Learning and attention reveal a general relationship between population activity and behavior. Science 359:463-465
Ruff, Douglas A; Cohen, Marlene R (2017) A normalization model suggests that attention changes the weighting of inputs between visual areas. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 114:E4085-E4094
Kanashiro, Tatjana; Ocker, Gabriel Koch; Cohen, Marlene R et al. (2017) Attentional modulation of neuronal variability in circuit models of cortex. Elife 6:
Ruff, Douglas A; Alberts, Joshua J; Cohen, Marlene R (2016) Relating normalization to neuronal populations across cortical areas. J Neurophysiol 116:1375-86
Ruff, Douglas A; Cohen, Marlene R (2016) Attention Increases Spike Count Correlations between Visual Cortical Areas. J Neurosci 36:7523-34
Oby, Emily R; Perel, Sagi; Sadtler, Patrick T et al. (2016) Extracellular voltage threshold settings can be tuned for optimal encoding of movement and stimulus parameters. J Neural Eng 13:036009
Ruff, Douglas A; Cohen, Marlene R (2016) Stimulus Dependence of Correlated Variability across Cortical Areas. J Neurosci 36:7546-56
Rabinowitz, Neil C; Goris, Robbe L; Cohen, Marlene et al. (2015) Attention stabilizes the shared gain of V4 populations. Elife 4:e08998
Mayo, J Patrick; Cohen, Marlene R; Maunsell, John H R (2015) A Refined Neuronal Population Measure of Visual Attention. PLoS One 10:e0136570
Ruff, Douglas A; Cohen, Marlene R (2014) Global cognitive factors modulate correlated response variability between V4 neurons. J Neurosci 34:16408-16

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