Abstract

Action stopping depends on at least two (fast, slow) frontal circuits depending on the urgency of execution of the ‘go’ response. Human EEG suggests a third (even slower, limbic) circuit that activates frontal areas at frequencies typical of ‘hippocampal theta’. Here we test in male rats whether stop-go conflict engages the hippocampus and so may send theta-modulated information via the frontal cortex to the subthalamic nucleus. We recorded from multi-electrode arrays in the hippocampus, orbitofrontal cortex, and subthalamus in 5 male Long Evans rats performing a stop signal task and, as in previous human experiments, assessed stop-signal specific power for effects of goal conflict. Conflict increased 11–12 Hz theta power modestly in all three structures but with the largest increase in power being at 5 Hz in the frontal cortex but not the hippocampus. There was increased conflict-related coherence in all circuits in the range 5–8 Hz and particularly at 5–6 Hz. Increased coherence coupled with an increase in conflict-induced low frequency power in the frontal cortex may reflect communication with the hippocampus. The data are consistent with a third limbic circuit that can generate stopping when go responses are particularly slow (as, e.g., in a go/no go task). [199 words; 200 max]

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