Abstract deliberation by visuomotor neurons in prefrontal cortex
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Abstract
During visually guided behavior, the prefrontal cortex plays a pivotal role in mapping sensory inputs onto appropriate motor plans [1]. When the sensory input is ambiguous, this involves deliberation. It is not known whether the deliberation is implemented as a competition between possible stimulus interpretations [2, 3] or between possible motor plans [4, 5, 6]. Here we study neural population activity in prefrontal cortex of macaque monkeys trained to flexibly report categorical judgments of ambiguous visual stimuli. Our task design allowed for the dissociation of neural predictors of the upcoming categorical choice and the upcoming motor response used to report this choice. We find that the population activity initially represents the formation of a categorical choice before transitioning into the stereotypical representation of the motor plan. We show that stimulus strength and prior expectations both bear on the formation of the categorical choice, but not on the formation of the action plan. These results suggest that prefrontal circuits involved in action selection are also used for the deliberation of abstract propositions divorced from a specific motor plan, thus providing a crucial mechanism for abstract reasoning.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00