Subspace partitioning in the human prefrontal cortex resolves cognitive interference
Article 2023 en
Authors
JW
Jan Weber
GI
Gabriela Yukari Iwama
AS
Anne‐Kristin Solbakk
Abstract
1 min read
The human prefrontal cortex (PFC) constitutes the structural basis underlying flexible cognitive control, where mixed-selective neural populations encode multiple task features to guide subsequent behavior. The mechanisms by which the brain simultaneously encodes multiple task–relevant variables while minimizing interference from task-irrelevant features remain unknown. Leveraging intracranial recordings from the human PFC, we first demonstrate that competition between coexisting representations of past and present task variables incurs a behavioral switch cost. Our results reveal that this interference between past and present states in the PFC is resolved through coding partitioning into distinct low-dimensional neural states; thereby strongly attenuating behavioral switch costs. In sum, these findings uncover a fundamental coding mechanism that constitutes a central building block of flexible cognitive control.
Jan Weber, Gabriela Yukari Iwama, Anne‐Kristin Solbakk, Alejandro O. Blenkmann, Pål G. Larsson, Jugoslav Ivanović, Robert T. Knight, Tor Endestad, Robert Thomas Knight
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