Attentional selection drives information convergence within macaque lateral prefrontal cortex
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Attention is a coherent state, in which multiple brain regions converge to represent selected features of a focal object or event. Lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC), with its flexible coding of multiple task features and their conjunctions, is widely believed to play a key role in this process. While much research has investigated biased competition between features within a brain region, and cofluctuations of activity between regions, less is known about the representational dynamics through which a coherent neural state emerges. Here, we examine directed mutual information concerning multiple feature-specific population codes, between dorsal and ventral LPFC, across three phases of an attentional selection task. We find bidirectional convergence of information regarding multiple task features, but specifically following the period of selection from the visual display. The results show that neural processes driving inter-region coherence are especially salient during a period of cued object selection, despite comparable local information representation during other task phases.
Significance statement
In the primate brain, lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) is thought to play a key role in selective attention, which is fundamental to goal-directed behaviour, and implies inter-region convergence towards a coherent neural state. Combining electrophysiological recordings, multivariate decoding, and analysis of information dynamics, we find population representations of multiple task features during multiple task phases, in both dorsal and ventral regions of LPFC, with inter-region representational coherence triggered by attentional selection. Results show that information convergence between these regions is bidirectional, sustained, and reflects multiple features of a chosen object, but, unlike local information representation, is highly specific to the choice phase of the task.