Learning of anticipatory responses in single neurons of the human medial temporal lobe

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作者
Leila Reddy
Marlene Poncet
Matthew W. Self
Judith C. Peters
Linda Douw
Edwin van Dellen
Steven Claus
Jaap C. Reijneveld
Johannes C. Baayen
Pieter R. Roelfsema
机构
[1] Université de Toulouse,Department of Vision and Cognition
[2] Centre de Recherche Cerveau et Cognition,Department of Cognitive Neuroscience
[3] Université Paul Sabatier,Department of Anatomy and Neurosciences
[4] CNRS,Department of Radiology
[5] UMR 5549,Department of Psychiatry
[6] Faculté de Médecine de Purpan,Department of Neurophysiology
[7] Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience (KNAW),Department of Neurology
[8] Neuroimaging & Neuromodeling Group,Department of Neurosurgery
[9] Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience,Department of Integrative Neurophysiology
[10] Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW),Psychiatry Department
[11] Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience,undefined
[12] Maastricht University,undefined
[13] VU University Medical Center,undefined
[14] Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging/Massachusetts General Hospital,undefined
[15] Brain Center Rudolf Magnus,undefined
[16] University Medical Center Utrecht,undefined
[17] VU University Medical Center,undefined
[18] Stichting Epilepsie Instellingen Nederland,undefined
[19] VU University Medical Center,undefined
[20] VU University Medical Center,undefined
[21] Centre for Neurogenomics and Cognitive Research,undefined
[22] Vrije Universiteit,undefined
[23] Academic Medical Center,undefined
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摘要
Neuronal processes underlying the formation of new associations in the human brain are not yet well understood. Here human participants, implanted with depth electrodes in the brain, learned arbitrary associations between images presented in an ordered, predictable sequence. During learning we recorded from medial temporal lobe (MTL) neurons that responded to at least one of the pictures in the sequence (the preferred stimulus). We report that as a result of learning, single MTL neurons show asymmetric shifts in activity and start firing earlier in the sequence in anticipation of their preferred stimulus. These effects appear relatively early in learning, after only 11 exposures to the stimulus sequence. The anticipatory neuronal responses emerge while the subjects became faster in reporting the next item in the sequence. These results demonstrate flexible representations that could support learning of new associations between stimuli in a sequence, in single neurons in the human MTL.
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