4.8 Article

Context-dependent persistency as a coding mechanism for robust and widely distributed value

Journal

NEURON
Volume 110, Issue 3, Pages 502-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.11.001

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01 NS091010, R01 EY025349, R01 DC014690, P30 EY022589]
  2. NSF [1940181]
  3. David & Lucile Packard Foundation
  4. Uehara Memorial Foundation
  5. JSPS
  6. Kanae Foundation for the Promotion of Medical Science
  7. Office of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure (OAC)
  8. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr [1940181] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Task-related information is coded with different persistency across the brain. The coding persistency of action history and value in mice varies across areas, learning phases, and task context, with the highest persistency observed in the retrosplenial cortex of expert mice. Persistent coding enables robust signal coding and distribution in neuronal networks.
Task-related information is widely distributed across the brain with different coding properties, such as persistency. We found in mice that coding persistency of action history and value was variable across areas, learning phases, and task context, with the highest persistency in the retrosplenial cortex of expert mice performing value-based decisions where history needs to be maintained across trials. Persistent coding also emerged in artificial networks trained to perform mouse-like reinforcement learning. Persistency allows temporally untangled value representations in neuronal manifolds where population activity exhibits cyclic trajectories that transition along the value axis after action outcomes, collectively forming cylindrical dynamics. Simulations indicated that untangled persistency facilitates robust value retrieval by downstream networks. Even leakage of persistently maintained value through non-specific connectivity could contribute to the brain-wide distributed value coding with different levels of persistency. These results reveal that context-dependent, untangled persistency facilitates reliable signal coding and its distribution across the brain.

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