scholarly journals Unexpected changes in learned task contingencies trigger sharp wave ripples in the primate hippocampus during virtual navigation

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary McIntosh ◽  
Benjamin Corrigan ◽  
Roberto Gulli ◽  
Guillaume Doucet ◽  
Julio Martinez-Trujillo ◽  
...  

Abstract The hippocampi and mesial temporal lobes play a central role in episodic memory and associative learning. It is unclear how unexpected experience influences learning. Hippocampal sharp wave ripples (SWR) are an electrical biomarker of memory consolidation. We tracked when and where SWR occur during 2 tasks. Local field potentials were recorded in the hippocampi, entorhinal cortices and amygdalae of non-human primates (NHP; n=3) performing reversal and associative learning tasks in a 3D virtual environment. Our results show hippocampal SWR occurred when learned task contingencies were unexpectedly altered. Surprise rewards and reward denial were associated with SWR rates 9.8x and 8.0x greater than expected rewards. The highest density of SWR occurred in zones where errors were made. SWR were preceded by event-related potentials in the amygdala but not entorhinal cortex. Our results suggest that SWR generation in primates may prioritize behaviourally relevant experience for commitment to memory to allow flexible learning.

1990 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 903-914 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. H. Bullock ◽  
M. H. Hofmann ◽  
F. K. Nahm ◽  
J. G. New ◽  
J. C. Prechtl

1. Compound field potentials were recorded with up to 18 microelectrodes in comb, brush, or spear arrays on and in the optic tectum and with suction electrodes from the distal stump of the cut optic nerve and from the optic nerve head in the opened eye in elasmobranchs and teleosts. Diffuse light flashes of different durations and submaximal intensities were delivered in trains with regular or irregular interstimulus intervals (ISI). 2. Event-related potentials (ERPs) are visible in single trials and begin at 50-200 ms after an "oddball" flash, especially one that is slightly weaker, briefer, or delayed by as little as 6% of ISI, compared with the more frequent stimulus. ERPs to the opposite condition are not of the same form or size. 3. One or more stimuli were omitted from a train or the train terminated after various conditioning times. Deflections occur beyond the expected visual-evoked potentials (VEPs) to the last flash and are called omitted-stimulus potentials (OSPs). They occur on schedule--approximately 100 ms after the next flash would be due--almost independent of intensity, duration, or conditioning time. They are considered to be ERPs without any necessary implication or denial of a temporally specific expectation. 4. Three components of OSP occur alone or in combination: an initial fast peak, a slow wave, and an oscillatory spindle up to ls or more in duration. This resembles the OFF response to steady light. 5. All these components are already present in the retina with optic nerve cut. 6. The same mean ISI with a high proportion of jitter gives OSPs with only slightly longer latencies and smaller amplitudes; the OSP acts as though the retina makes an integrated prediction of ISI, intensity, and duration. 7. During a conditioning train the equilibrium between excitation and inhibition after each flash changes according to frequency, intensity, duration, and conditioning time; the VEP reflects this in a shape unique to the ISI; inhibition increases rapidly after each flash and then decays slowly according to the recent mean ISI. This allows rebound disinhibition after missing, weak, or delayed flashes (OSP or ERP) or causes an altered VEP after a longer or stronger oddball. 8. It seems unlikely that the OSP or oddball ERP in fish tectum is equivalent to mammalian ERPs under the same regime or signals higher cognitive events, because they are already present in the retina, require flash frequencies greater than 1 Hz, and grow with frequency up to and beyond flicker fusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuri G. Pavlov ◽  
Boris Kotchoubey

AbstractThe nature of cortical plasticity in the course of learning is one of the most intriguing questions of the modern cognitive neuroscience. Aversive conditioning is a type of associative learning produced by continuous pairing of neutral and aversive stimuli. Aversive conditioning and electroencephalography together provide a good framework for expanding our knowledge about fast learning-related cortical changes. In our experiment we tested a novel paradigm to study associative learning where aversive conditioning was combined with passive oddball. We employed conditioned auditory neutral stimuli and unconditioned aversive electrical shocks and used time-frequency, connectivity and event-related potentials (ERP) analyses to explore their interaction. First, we observed changes in the cortical activity in the form of conditioning-induced multisensory integration. The integration manifested itself in (1) desynchronization of lower beta activity in the contralateral to expected electrical shocks hemisphere and (2) enhanced functional connectivity between auditory and somatosensory cortex in the gamma frequency band. Second, we found a larger amplitude of P3a and the late posterior positivity (LPP) components of ERP to conditioned stimuli, which may be related to increased attentional and emotional significance of these stimuli. Our results reproduced and extended previous findings about multisensory integration in classical conditioning and demonstrated the improved discriminability of ERP responses through incorporation of the oddball paradigm in associative learning.


2018 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. 725-740 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bardia Nouriziabari ◽  
Susmita Sarkar ◽  
Stephanie E. Tanninen ◽  
Robert D. Dayton ◽  
Ronald L. Klein ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mareike Bayer ◽  
Annika Graß ◽  
Annekathrin Schacht

AbstractEmotion effects in event-related potentials (ERPs) during reading have been observed at very short latencies of around 100 to 200 ms after word onset. The nature of these effects remains a matter of debate: First, it is possible that they reflect semantic access, which might thus occur much faster than proposed by most reading models. Second, it is possible that associative learning of a word’s shape might contribute to the emergence of emotion effects during visual processing. The present study addressed this question by employing an associative learning paradigm on pronounceable letter strings (pseudowords). In a learning session, letter strings were associated with positive, neutral or negative valence by means of monetary gain, loss or zero-outcome. Crucially, half of the stimuli were learned in the visual modality, while the other half was presented acoustically, allowing for experimental separation of associated valence and physical percept. In a test session one or two days later, acquired letter string were presented in an old/new decision task while we recorded event-related potentials. Behavioural data showed an advantage for gain-associated stimuli both during learning and in the delayed old/new task. Early emotion effects in ERPs were limited to visually acquired letter strings, but absent for acoustically acquired letter strings. These results imply that associative learning of a word’s visual features might play an important role in the emergence of emotion effects at the stage of perceptual processing.


2009 ◽  
Vol 102 (4) ◽  
pp. 2375-2386 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremiah Y. Cohen ◽  
Richard P. Heitz ◽  
Jeffrey D. Schall ◽  
Geoffrey F. Woodman

Despite nearly a century of electrophysiological studies recording extracranially from humans and intracranially from monkeys, the neural generators of nearly all human event-related potentials (ERPs) have not been definitively localized. We recorded an attention-related ERP component, known as the N2pc, simultaneously with intracranial spikes and local field potentials (LFPs) in macaques to test the hypothesis that an attentional-control structure, the frontal eye field (FEF), contributed to the generation of the macaque homologue of the N2pc (m-N2pc). While macaques performed a difficult visual search task, the search target was selected earliest by spikes from single FEF neurons, later by FEF LFPs, and latest by the m-N2pc. This neurochronometric comparison provides an empirical bridge connecting macaque and human experiments and a step toward localizing the neural generator of this important attention-related ERP component.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Emilio Vazquez ◽  
Enrico Opri ◽  
Brandon Parks ◽  
Gunduz Aysegul

Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) typically results in the formation of large signal artifacts in electrophysiological recordings in the surrounding regions of the stimulated area. This can prove to be problematic, as it makes the study of physiological responses in Local Field Potentials (LFPs), and consequently Event Related Potentials (ERPs) quite challenging. Research has been done in attempts to attenuate the effects of these large artifacts through various ways, most commonly through blind suppression, function fitting, template subtraction, and adaptive filters. However, many of these methods have proven to only be useful within the context of surface recordings (EEGs) and not for LFPs. In our research, we utilize template subtraction and extend it to the context of LFPs, in an attempt to uncover more effectively the underlying physiological responses to DBS.


2007 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 143-147
Author(s):  
Thomas Grunwald ◽  
Manila Vannucci ◽  
Nico Pezer ◽  
Martin Kurthen ◽  
Johannes Schramm ◽  
...  

Eye contact is a powerful social stimulus for human and non-human primates. However, it is unclear whether brain mechanisms that interpret eye contact are sensitive to gender. Here we show that human brain responses to eye contact are indeed gender specific. Recording event-related potentials directly from the medial temporal lobes, we found that eye contact elicited specific responses in men only when they saw female faces. Conversely, women responded specifically to eye contact only when they saw pictures of men. Thus, the human medial temporal lobes subserve specifically the processing of eye contact with persons of the opposite gender.


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