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  • 26
    Jan 2018

    NEW PAPER: Gamma and beta bursts during working memory readout suggest roles in its volitional control


    Miller Lab
    Miller Laboratory, Neuroscience

    Lundqvist, M., Herman, P. Warden, M.R., Brincat, S.L., and Miller, E.K. (2018) Gamma and beta bursts during working memory read-out suggest roles in its volitional control. Nature Communications. 9, Article number: 394 doi:10.1038/s41467-017-02791-8

    Abstract:
    Working memory (WM) activity is not as stationary or sustained as previously thought. There are brief bursts of gamma (~50–120 Hz) and beta (~20–35 Hz) oscillations, the former linked to stimulus information in spiking. We examined these dynamics in relation to readout and control mechanisms of WM. Monkeys held sequences of two objects in WM to match to subsequent sequences. Changes in beta and gamma bursting suggested their distinct roles. In anticipation of having to use an object for the match decision, there was an increase in gamma and spiking information about that object and reduced beta bursting. This readout signal was only seen before relevant test objects, and was related to premotor activity. When the objects were no longer needed, beta increased and gamma decreased together with object spiking information. Deviations from these dynamics predicted behavioral errors. Thus, beta could regulate gamma and the information in WM.

  • 25
    Jan 2018

    New paper: Different Levels of Category Abstraction by Different Dynamics in Different Prefrontal Areas


    Miller Lab
    Miller Laboratory, Neuroscience

    Wutz, A., Loonis, R., Roy, J.E., Donoghue, J.A., and Miller, E.K. (2018) Different levels of category abstraction by different dynamics in different prefrontal areas. Neuron  published online Jan 25 2018.

    SUMMARY

    Categories can be grouped by shared sensory attributes (i.e. cats) or by a more abstract rule (i.e. animals). We explored the neural basis of abstraction by recording from multi-electrode arrays in prefrontal cortex (PFC) while monkeys performed a dot-pattern categorization task. Category abstraction was varied by the degree of exemplar distortion from the prototype pattern. Different dynamics in different PFC regions processed different levels of category abstraction. Bottom-up dynamics (stimulus-locked gamma power and spiking) in ventral PFC processed more low-level abstractions whereas top-down dynamics (beta power and beta spike-LFP coherence) in dorsal PFC processed more high-level abstractions. Our results suggest a two-stage, rhythm-based model for abstracting categories.

  • 18
    Jan 2018

    Miller Lab postdoc Andre Bastos selected as an APS Rising Star.


    Miller Lab
    In The News, Miller Laboratory

    Andre Bastos was selected at a Rising Star by the Association for Psychological Science.  Indeed, he is.  Congrats, Andre!

    http://www.psychologicalscience.org/rising-stars/stars.cfm

    Check out Andre’s latest paper:
    Bastos, A.M., Loonis, R., Kornblith, S., Lundqvist, M., and Miller, E.K. (2018)  Laminar recordings in frontal cortex suggest distinct layers for maintenance and control of working memory.  Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. doi:10.1073/pnas.1710323115   View PDF

  • 18
    Jan 2018

    Anterior Cingulate Cortex Input to the Claustrum Is Required for Top-Down Action Control


    Miller Lab
    Neuroscience

    A new addition to the proposed circuitry for top-down control.

    White, M. G., Panicker, M., Mu, C., Carter, A. M., Roberts, B. M., Dharmasri, P. A., & Mathur, B. N. (2018). Anterior Cingulate Cortex Input to the Claustrum Is Required for Top-Down Action Control. Cell reports, 22(1), 84-95.

  • 17
    Jan 2018

    Dopamine Is Signaled by Mid-frequency Oscillations and Boosts Output Layers Visual Information in Visual Cortex


    Miller Lab
    Neuroscience

    The authors find that dopamine increased power of beta-low gamma oscillations in cortex.  During visual stimulation, dopamine increased information encoding over a wide range of frequencies but most prominently in the feedforward supragranular layers and in the gamma band (50-100 Hz).

    Zaldivar, D., Goense, J., Lowe, S. C., Logothetis, N. K., & Panzeri, S. (2018). Dopamine Is Signaled by Mid-frequency Oscillations and Boosts Output Layers Visual Information in Visual Cortex. Current Biology.

    This must be correct.  It is very remarkably consistent with our recent study 🙂
    Bastos, A.M., Loonis, R., Kornblith, S., Lundqvist, M., and Miller, E.K. (2018)  Laminar recordings in frontal cortex suggest distinct layers for maintenance and control of working memory.  Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. doi:10.1073/pnas.1710323115   View PDF

    as well as with our previous work showing that gamma is associated with bottom-up processing:
    Buschman, T.J. and Miller, E.K. (2007) Top-down versus bottom-up control of attention in the prefrontal and posterior parietal cortices. Science. 315: 1860-1862  View PDF » 

  • 16
    Jan 2018

    Our new model of working memory as illustrated by Charles Mingus and Miles Davis


    Miller Lab
    Miller Laboratory, Neuroscience
    Our new model of working memory as illustrated by Charles Mingus and Miles Davis

    High frequency waves (Davis on trumpet) carry sensory inputs from the back of the brain to the front. Low frequency waves (Mingus on bass) carry executive (top-down) information from the front to the back of the brain. The low frequencies control the expression of high frequencies. That’s how you choose what sensory inputs to hold in mind (working memory). (Image: Andre Bastos)

    It makes sense because we all know that the bass should guide the lead instruments. Am I right?

    Bastos, A.M., Loonis, R., Kornblith, S., Lundqvist, M., and Miller, E.K. (2018) Laminar recordings in frontal cortex suggest distinct layers for maintenance and control of working memory. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. published ahead of print January 16, 2018, doi:10.1073/pnas.1710323115

    Read MIT press release here.

     

  • 16
    Jan 2018

    New paper: Laminar recordings in frontal cortex suggest distinct layers for maintenance and control of working memory


    Miller Lab
    Miller Laboratory

    This is the first of three papers that all lead to the same general conclusion:  Sensory (bottom-up) information is fed forward through cortex by gamma (>50 Hz) waves in superficial cortical layers. Executive (top-down) information is fed back through cortex by alpha/beta waves (4-22 Hz) in deep cortical layers. The beta waves in deep layers regulate superficial layer gamma in a push-pull fashion thereby allowing top-down information to control the flow of bottom-up sensory information. This allows volitional control over what we hold in mind.  Stayed tuned for the other two papers. They will appear in the next few weeks.

    Bastos, A.M., Loonis, R., Kornblith, S., Lundqvist, M., and Miller, E.K. (2018) Laminar recordings in frontal cortex suggest distinct layers for maintenance and control of working memory. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. published ahead of print January 16, 2018, doi:10.1073/pnas.1710323115

    Read MIT press release here.

  • 9
    Jan 2018

    Persistent neuronal activity in human prefrontal cortex links perception and action


    Miller Lab
    Neuroscience

    Persistent activity (indexed by broadband gamma) across human cortex encodes stimulus features and predicts motor output.

    Haller, Matar, John Case, Nathan E. Crone, Edward F. Chang, David King-Stephens, Kenneth D. Laxer, Peter B. Weber, Josef Parvizi, Robert T. Knight, and Avgusta Y. Shestyuk. “Persistent neuronal activity in human prefrontal cortex links perception and action.” Nature Human Behaviour (2017): 1.

    But how persistent is it?
    Lundqvist, M., Rose, J., Herman, P, Brincat, S.L, Buschman, T.J., and Miller, E.K. (2016) Gamma and beta bursts underlie working memory.  Neuron, published online March 17, 2016. View PDF »

  • 9
    Jan 2018

    Feedback from human posterior parietal cortex enables visuospatial category representations as early as primary visual cortex


    Miller Lab
    Neuroscience

    Coarse visuospatial categories are represented in the posterior parietal cortex whereas fine-scale discrimination are in primary visual cortex with the latter depending on feedback from the former.

    Li, Y., Hu, X., Yu, Y., Zhao, K., Saalmann, Y. B., & Wang, L. (2017). Feedback from human posterior parietal cortex enables visuospatial category representations as early as primary visual cortex. Brain and Behavior.

  • 9
    Jan 2018

    Electrical stimulation of macaque lateral prefrontal cortex modulates oculomotor behavior indicative of a disruption of top-down attention


    Miller Lab
    Neuroscience

    The authors report different effects of stimulation of the lateral prefrontal cortex.  Stimulation at or near the FEF prolonged or decreased saccade reaction time, depending on task instructions.  More rostral stimulation affected the attention weighting of saccade targets.

    Schwedhelm, P., Baldauf, D., & Treue, S. (2017). Electrical stimulation of macaque lateral prefrontal cortex modulates oculomotor behavior indicative of a disruption of top-down attention. Scientific reports, 7(1), 17715.

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