Abstract
Visual working memory (WM) tasks involve a network of cortical areas such as inferotemporal, medial temporal and prefrontal cortices. We suggest here to investigate the role of the basal ganglia (BG) in the learning of delayed rewarded tasks through the selective gating of thalamocortical loops. We designed a computational model of the visual loop linking the perirhinal cortex, the BG and the thalamus, biased by sustained representations in prefrontal cortex. This model learns concurrently different delayed rewarded tasks that require to maintain a visual cue and to associate it to itself or to another visual object to obtain reward. The retrieval of visual information is achieved through thalamic stimulation of the perirhinal cortex. The input structure of the BG, the striatum, learns to represent visual information based on its association to reward, while the output structure, the substantia nigra pars reticulata, learns to link striatal representations to the disinhibition of the correct thalamocortical loop. In parallel, a dopaminergic cell learns to associate striatal representations to reward and modulates learning of connections within the BG. The model provides testable predictions about the behavior of several areas during such tasks, while providing a new functional organization of learning within the BG, putting emphasis on the learning of the striatonigral connections as well as the lateral connections within the substantia nigra pars reticulata. It suggests that the learning of visual WM tasks is achieved rapidly in the BG and used as a teacher for feedback connections from prefrontal cortex to posterior cortices.
Highlights
During object-based visual search, target templates stored in visual working memory (WM) can bias attentional processing in visual areas to favorize the relevant objects (Desimone and Duncan, 1995; Woodman et al, 2007)
Visual WM can be investigated through a number of different tasks in rats, primates or humans, among which change detection, recall procedures, delayed matching-to-sample (DMS), delayed nonmatching-to-sample (DNMS) or delayed pairassociation (DPA) tasks are frequently used
Specific attention has been directed towards the prefrontal cortex which is well-known to be involved in WM maintenance and manipulation in various modalities (Fuster and Alexander, 1971; Funahashi et al, 1989)
Summary
During object-based visual search, target templates stored in visual working memory (WM) can bias attentional processing in visual areas to favorize the relevant objects (Desimone and Duncan, 1995; Woodman et al, 2007). Visual WM can be investigated through a number of different tasks in rats, primates or humans, among which change detection, recall procedures, delayed matching-to-sample (DMS), delayed nonmatching-to-sample (DNMS) or delayed pairassociation (DPA) tasks are frequently used. Visual WM has several computational aspects: encoding of the relevant items (potentially in an abstract manner), maintenance of the items through time in face of distractors, retrieval of the sensory content of the item, abstraction of the underlying rule. It faces both a structural credit assignment problem (which item to store and retrieve) and a temporal assignment problem (how to link encoding in WM with the delayed delivery of reward). Prefrontal lesions do not totally eliminate visual WM but impairs the ability to maintain it during long delays or in front of distractors (Petrides, 2000; D’Esposito et al, 2006)
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