Cell Reports
Volume 36, Issue 5, 3 August 2021, 109469
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Report
Nucleus basalis stimulation enhances working memory by stabilizing stimulus representations in primate prefrontal cortical activity

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2021.109469Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Monkey performance of working memory tasks improves with nucleus basalis (NB) stimulation

  • Activity of prefrontal neurons increases under NB stimulation

  • Tuning of neurons becomes broader, making the network more stable

  • Working memory performance is determined by a stability-accuracy tradeoff

Summary

Acetylcholine plays a critical role in the neocortex. Cholinergic agonists and acetylcholinesterase inhibitors can enhance cognitive functioning, as does intermittent electrical stimulation of the cortical source of acetylcholine, the nucleus basalis (NB) of Meynert. Here we show in two male monkeys how NB stimulation affects working memory and alters its neural code. NB stimulation increases dorsolateral prefrontal activity during the delay period of spatial working memory tasks and broadens selectivity for stimuli but does not strengthen phasic responses to each neuron’s optimal visual stimulus. Paradoxically, despite this decrease in neuronal selectivity, performance improves in many task conditions, likely indicating increased delay period stability. Performance under NB stimulation does decline if distractors similar to the target are presented, consistent with reduced prefrontal selectivity. Our results indicate that stimulation of the cholinergic forebrain increases prefrontal neural activity, and this neuromodulatory tone can improve cognitive performance, subject to a stability-accuracy tradeoff.

Keywords

acetylcholine
neurophysiology
monkey
basal forebrain
cognition

Data and code availability

  • Data used for the analysis and figures have been deposited at Mendeley.com and are publicly available as of the date of publication. DOIs are listed in the Key resources table.

  • This paper does not report original code

  • Any additional information required to reanalyze the data reported in this paper is available from the lead contact upon request.

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