Decoding working memory information from persistent and activity-silent neurons in the primate prefrontal cortex

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2023 Jul 28:2023.07.25.550371. doi: 10.1101/2023.07.25.550371.

Abstract

Persistent activity of neurons in the prefrontal cortex has been thought to represent the information maintained in working memory, though alternative models have recently challenged this idea. Activity-silent theories posit that stimulus information may be maintained by the activity pattern of neurons that do not produce firing rate significantly elevated about their baseline during the delay period of working memory tasks. We thus tested the ability of neurons that do and do not generate persistent activity in the prefrontal cortex of monkeys to represent spatial and object information in working memory. Neurons that generated persistent activity represented more information about the stimuli in both spatial and object working memory tasks. The amount of information that could be decoded from neural activity depended on the choice of decoder and parameters used but neurons with persistent activity outperformed non-persistent neurons consistently. Although averaged across all neurons and stimuli, firing rate did not appear clearly elevated above baseline during the maintenance of neural activity particularly for object working memory, this grant average masked neurons that generated persistent activity selective for their preferred stimuli, which carried the majority of information about the stimulus identity. These results reveal that prefrontal neurons with generate persistent activity constitute the primary mechanism of working memory maintenance in the cortex.

New and noteworthy: Competing theories suggest that neurons that generate persistent activity or do not are primarily responsible for the maintenance of information, particularly regarding object working memory. While the two models have been debated on theoretical terms, direct comparison of empirical results have been lacking. Analysis of neural activity in a large database of prefrontal recordings revealed that neurons that generate persistent activity were primarily responsible for the maintenance of both spatial and object working memory.

Publication types

  • Preprint