Successful task switching requires a network of brain areas to select, maintain, implement, and execute the appropriate task. Although frontoparietal brain areas are thought to play a critical role in task switching by selecting and encoding task rules and exerting top-down control, how brain areas closer to the execution of tasks participate in task switching is unclear. The superior colliculus (SC) integrates information from various brain areas to generate saccades and is likely influenced by task switching. Here, we investigated switch costs in non-human primates and their neural correlates in the activity of SC saccade-related neurons in monkeys performing cued, randomly interleaved pro- and anti-saccade trials. We predicted that behavioral switch costs would be associated with differential modulations of SC activity in trials on which the task was switched versus repeated, with activity on the current trial resembling that associated with the task-set of the previous trial when a switch occurred. We observed both error rate and reaction time switch costs and changes in the discharge rate and timing of activity in SC neurons between switch and repeat trials. These changes were present later in the task, only after fixation on the cue stimuli, but prior to saccade onset. These results further establish switch costs in macaque monkeys and suggest that SC activity is modulated by task switching processes in a manner inconsistent with the concept of task-set inertia.
from #ORL-AlexandrosSfakianakis via ola Kala on Inoreader http://ift.tt/2wKkRwa
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