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  4. Learning Recruits Neurons Representing Previously Established Associations in the Corvid Endbrain
 
research article

Learning Recruits Neurons Representing Previously Established Associations in the Corvid Endbrain

Veit, Lena
•
Pidpruzhnykova, Galyna
•
Nieder, Andreas
2017
Journal Of Cognitive Neuroscience

Crows quickly learn arbitrary associations. As a neuronal correlate of this behavior, single neurons in the corvid endbrain area nidopallium caudolaterale (NCL) change their response properties during association learning. In crows performing a delayed association task that required them to map both familiar and novel sample pictures to the same two choice pictures, NCL neurons established a common, prospective code for associations. Here, we report that neuronal tuning changes during learning were not distributed equally in the recorded population of NCL neurons. Instead, such learning-related changes relied almost exclusively on neurons which were already encoding familiar associations. Only in such neurons did behavioral improvements during learning of novel associations coincide with increasing selectivity over the learning process. The size and direction of selectivity for familiar and newly learned associations were highly correlated. These increases in selectivity for novel associations occurred only late in the delay period. Moreover, NCL neurons discriminated correct from erroneous trial outcome based on feedback signals at the end of the trial, particularly in newly learned associations. Our results indicate that task-relevant changes during association learning are not distributed within the population of corvid NCL neurons but rather are restricted to a specific group of association-selective neurons. Such association neurons in the multimodal cognitive integration area NCL likely play an important role during highly flexible behavior in corvids.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1162/jocn_a_01152
Web of Science ID

WOS:000408651200007

Author(s)
Veit, Lena
Pidpruzhnykova, Galyna
Nieder, Andreas
Date Issued

2017

Publisher

Mit Press

Published in
Journal Of Cognitive Neuroscience
Volume

29

Issue

10

Start page

1712

End page

1724

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
BMI  
Available on Infoscience
October 9, 2017
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/141165
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