Abstract

Cognition involves using attended information, maintained in working memory (WM), to guide action. During a cognitive task, a correct response requires flexible, selective gating so that only the appropriate information flows from WM to downstream effectors that carry out the response. In this work, we used biophysically-detailed modeling to explore the hypothesis that network oscillations in prefrontal cortex (PFC), leveraging local inhibition, can independently gate responses to items in WM. The key role of local inhibition was to control the period between spike bursts in the outputs, and to produce an oscillatory response no matter whether the WM item was maintained in an asynchronous or oscillatory state. We found that the WM item that induced an oscillatory population response in the PFC output layer with the shortest period between spike bursts was most reliably propagated. The network resonant frequency (i.e., the input frequency that produces the largest response) of the output layer can be flexibly tuned by varying the excitability of deep layer principal cells. Our model suggests that experimentally-observed modulation of PFC beta-frequency (15–30 Hz) and gamma-frequency (30–80 Hz) oscillations could leverage network resonance and local inhibition to govern the flexible routing of signals in service to cognitive processes like gating outputs from working memory and the selection of rule-based actions. Importantly, we show for the first time that nonspecific changes in deep layer excitability can tune the output gate’s resonant frequency, enabling the specific selection of signals encoded by populations in asynchronous or fast oscillatory states. More generally, this represents a dynamic mechanism by which adjusting network excitability can govern the propagation of asynchronous and oscillatory signals throughout neocortex.

Highlights

  • Many cognitive tasks require flexible routing of information from multiple sources to update internal rule representations and guide responses (Badre & Frank, 2012; Bhandari & Badre, 2018; Buschman, Denovellis, Diogo, Bullock, & Miller, 2012; Hasselmo & Stern, 2018; Melrose, Poulin, & Stern, 2007; Zhu, Paschalidis, Chang, Stern, & Hasselmo, 2020; Zhu, Paschalidis, & Hasselmo, 2018)

  • Cognition involves routing of attended information to guide correct responses based on information that has been buffered in working memory (WM) (Baddeley & Hitch, 1974; Miller, 2000)

  • We used biophysically-detailed modeling to explore the hypothesis that network oscillations in the relay network, leveraging local inhibition, can independently gate responses to items represented in source populations like those encoding items in working memory

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Summary

Introduction

Many cognitive tasks require flexible routing of information from multiple sources to update internal rule representations and guide responses (Badre & Frank, 2012; Bhandari & Badre, 2018; Buschman, Denovellis, Diogo, Bullock, & Miller, 2012; Hasselmo & Stern, 2018; Melrose, Poulin, & Stern, 2007; Zhu, Paschalidis, Chang, Stern, & Hasselmo, 2020; Zhu, Paschalidis, & Hasselmo, 2018). Cognition involves routing of attended information to guide correct responses based on information that has been buffered in working memory (WM) (Baddeley & Hitch, 1974; Miller, 2000). We investigate routing from the perspective of a network in which internal dynamics regulate the feedforward transmission (i.e., a relay network) that selectively propagates one or more competing signals, effectively gating out signals that lose the competition. We used biophysically-detailed modeling to explore the hypothesis that network oscillations in the relay network, leveraging local inhibition, can independently gate responses to items represented in source populations like those encoding items in working memory

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