ACTIVITY OF SINGLE NEURONS IN THE MONKEY AMYGDALA DURING PERFORMANCE OF A VISUAL-DISCRIMINATION TASK

被引:116
作者
NAKAMURA, K [1 ]
MIKAMI, A [1 ]
KUBOTA, K [1 ]
机构
[1] KYOTO UNIV, PRIMATE RES INST, DEPT NEUROPHYSIOL, INUYAMA, AICHI 484, JAPAN
关键词
D O I
10.1152/jn.1992.67.6.1447
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
1. The activity of single neurons was recorded extracellularly from the monkey amygdala while monkeys performed a visual discrimination task. The monkeys were trained to remember a visual stimulus during a delay period (0.5-3.0 s), to discriminate a new visual stimulus from the stimulus, and to release a lever when the new stimulus was presented. Colored photographs (human faces, monkeys, foods, and nonfood objects) or computer-generated two-dimensional shapes (a yellow triangle, a red circle, etc.) were used as visual stimuli. 2. The activity of 160 task-related neurons was studied. Of these, 144 (90%) responded to visual stimuli, 13 (8%) showed firing during the delay Period, and 9 (6%) responded to the reward. 3. Task-related neurons were categorized according to the way in which various stimuli activated the neurons. First, to evaluate the proportion of all tested stimuli that elicited changes in activity of a neuron, selectivity index 1 (SI1) was employed. Second, to evaluate the ability of a neuron to discriminate a stimulus from another stimulus, SI2 was employed. On the basis of the calculated values of SI1 and SI2, neurons were classified as selective and nonselective. Most visual neurons were categorized as selective (131/144), and a few were characterized as nonselective (13/144). Neurons active during the delay period were also categorized as selective visual and delay neurons (6/13 )and as nonselective delay neurons (7/13). 4. Responses of selective visual neurons had various temporal and stimulus-selective properties. Latencies ranged widely from 60 to 300 ms. Response durations also ranged widely from 20 to 870 ms. When the natures of the various effective stimuli were studied for each neuron, one-fourth of the responses of these neurons were considered to reflect some categorical aspect of the stimuli, such as human, monkey, food, or nonfood object. Furthermore, the responses of some neurons apparently reflected a certain behavioral significance of the stimuli that was separate from the task, such as the face of a particular person, smiling human faces, etc. 5. Nonselective visual neurons responded to a visual stimulus, regardless of its nature. They also responded in the absence of a visual stimulus when the monkey anticipated the appearance of the next stimulus. 6. Selective visual and delay neurons fired in response to particular stimuli and throughout the subsequent delay periods. Nonselective delay neurons increased their discharge rates gradually during the delay period, and the discharge rate decreased after the next stimulus was presented. 7. Task-related neurons were identified in six histologically distinct nuclei of the amygdala. Selective visual neurons were mainly located in the dorsal part of both the lateral and the lateral basal nuclei, which receive afferent projections from the inferotemporal cortex. 8. Probably, selective visual neurons can receive visual information from the inferotemporal cortex, and these neurons may be related to the recognition and/or the evaluation of complex visual stimuli. Selective visual and delay neurons may be associated with short-term storage of visual information. However, nonselective visual neurons, as well as nonselective delay neurons, may be related to the anticipation of a visual stimulus or may reflect the monkey's level of attention. Our data suggest that the monkey amygdala may be involved in the recognition and/or evaluation of complex stimuli, and it may play a role, though relatively minor, in the short-term storage of complex visual stimuli.
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页码:1447 / 1463
页数:17
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