Abstract

The primate lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) encodes visual stimulus features while they are perceived and while they are maintained in working memory. However, it remains unclear whether perceived and memorized features are encoded by the same or different neurons and population activity patterns. Here we record LPFC neuronal activity while monkeys perceive the motion direction of a stimulus that remains visually available, or memorize the direction if the stimulus disappears. We find neurons with a wide variety of combinations of coding strength for perceived and memorized directions: some neurons encode both to similar degrees while others preferentially or exclusively encode either one. Reading out the combined activity of all neurons, a machine-learning algorithm reliably decode the motion direction and determine whether it is perceived or memorized. Our results indicate that a functionally diverse population of LPFC neurons provides a substrate for discriminating between perceptual and mnemonic representations of visual features.

Highlights

  • The primate lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) encodes visual stimulus features while they are perceived and while they are maintained in working memory

  • We investigated how coding of perceived and memorized features are distributed across the population of LPFC

  • Neurons showed a wide variety of combinations of coding strength for perceived and memorized directions, with some neurons preferentially or exclusively encoding one of these two types of representations and others encoding both

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Summary

Introduction

The primate lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) encodes visual stimulus features while they are perceived and while they are maintained in working memory It remains unclear whether perceived and memorized features are encoded by the same or different neurons and population activity patterns. During the memory period of delayed match-tosample tasks, LPFC neurons encode the remembered location or non-spatial features of visual stimuli[2,5,6,7]. It remains unclear whether the same or different neurons within. LPFC encode visual features while they are perceptually available (perceptual coding), and when they are held in working memory (mnemonic coding)

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