ePoster

FRONTAL CORTEX DYNAMICS SUGGEST TEMPORAL MISALIGNMENT BETWEEN SENSORY EVIDENCE AND CHOICE

Balma Serrano Porcarand 5 co-authors

IDIBAPS

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS01-07AM-305

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS01-07AM-305

Poster preview

FRONTAL CORTEX DYNAMICS SUGGEST TEMPORAL MISALIGNMENT BETWEEN SENSORY EVIDENCE AND CHOICE poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS01-07AM-305

Abstract

Neural ensembles in mouse frontal cortex are essential for maintaining choices in short-term memory (Guo et al. 2014). Modeling work explains choice maintenance through attractor dynamics, where stimulus onset triggers a landscape that stabilizes choice representations until response (Inagaki et al. 2019). However, this model assumes tight temporal alignment between stimulus presentation and decision, an assumption that may fail when the stimulus timing is unpredictable. To explore this, we developed a three-choice visuospatial delayed-response task for freely-moving mice with variable stimulus and delay durations. Choice accuracy increased with stimulus duration and decreased with delay length, suggesting both perceptual and forgetting errors. Importantly, mice still responded on trials where the stimulus was never presented, indicating that decisions can be initiated independently of sensory input. Motivated by this observation, we extended the two-choice attractor network model to a three-choice circuit with three excitatory populations coupled via global inhibition. The network received two inputs: a transient stimulus-selective signal and a non-selective ramping input representing an internal urgency to decide. In data-fitted models, task performance depended on the temporal alignment between the sensory input and urgency buildup. Misalignment produced a previously unconsidered error occurring when urgency peaked after stimulus offset, resulting in delayed choice encoding. Consistent with this prediction, population activity in the secondary motor cortex revealed that choice encoding emerged later in error trials. Together, these results show that decisions are not necessarily aligned with the stimulus presentation, and task performance is determined by the relative timing between stimulus and choice.

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