Abstract

The orbitofrontal cortex, one of the key neocortical areas in valuation and emotion, is critical for cognitive flexibility but its role in the consolidation of recently acquired information remains unclear. Here, we demonstrate orbitofrontal offline replay in the context of a place-reward association task on a maze with varying goal locations. When switches in place-reward coupling were applied, replay was enhanced relative to sessions with stable contingencies. Moreover, replay strength was positively correlated with the subsequent overnight change in behavioral performance. Interrogating relationships between orbitofrontal and hippocampal activity, we found that orbitofrontal and hippocampal replay could occur independently but became coordinated during a type of cortical state with strong spiking activity. These findings reveal a structured form of offline orbitofrontal ensemble activity that is correlated with cognitive flexibility required to adapt to changing task contingencies, and becomes associated with hippocampal replay only during a specific state of high cortical excitability.

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