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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Flexible selection of task-relevant features through population gating

Joao Barbosa

Ostojic lab, Ecole Normale Superieure

Schedule
Wednesday, December 7, 2022

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Schedule

Wednesday, December 7, 2022

6:00 PM Europe/Berlin

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Host: WWNeuRise

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

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Host

WWNeuRise

Duration

35 minutes

Abstract

Brains can gracefully weed out irrelevant stimuli to guide behavior. This feat is believed to rely on a progressive selection of task-relevant stimuli across the cortical hierarchy, but the specific across-area interactions enabling stimulus selection are still unclear. Here, we propose that population gating, occurring within A1 but controlled by top-down inputs from mPFC, can support across-area stimulus selection. Examining single-unit activity recorded while rats performed an auditory context-dependent task, we found that A1 encoded relevant and irrelevant stimuli along a common dimension of its neural space. Yet, the relevant stimulus encoding was enhanced along an extra dimension. In turn, mPFC encoded only the stimulus relevant to the ongoing context. To identify candidate mechanisms for stimulus selection within A1, we reverse-engineered low-rank RNNs trained on a similar task. Our analyses predicted that two context-modulated neural populations gated their preferred stimulus in opposite contexts, which we confirmed in further analyses of A1. Finally, we show in a two-region RNN how population gating within A1 could be controlled by top-down inputs from PFC, enabling flexible across-area communication despite fixed inter-areal connectivity.

Topics

RNNa1auditory contextmPFCneural populationspopulation gatingsingle-unit activitystimulus selectiontask-relevant features

About the Speaker

Joao Barbosa

Ostojic lab, Ecole Normale Superieure

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

jmourabarbosa.github.io

@jmourabarbosa

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/jmourabarbosa

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