Tuesday, January 16, 2024

Biopsychology Colloquium: Mixed Selectivity in the Midbrain

12:00 PM

4464 East Hall

Featuring MNI Affiliate Member Pierre Apostolides, Ph.D., Professor of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery; and Assistant Professor of Molecular and Integrative Physiology.

Neural activity of neo-cortical and limbic systems often reflects dynamic combinations of sensory and behaviorally relevant variables, and these “mixed representations” are suggested to be important for perception, learning, and plasticity. However, the extent to which such integrative computations might occur in brain regions upstream of the forebrain is less clear. Here, we conduct cellular-resolution 2-photon Ca2+ imaging in the superficial “shell” layers of the inferior colliculus (IC), as head-fixed mice of either sex perform a reward-based psychometric auditory task. We find that the activity of individual shell IC neurons jointly reflects auditory cues and mice’s actions, such that trajectories of neural population activity diverge depending on mice’s behavioral choice. Consequently, simple classifier models trained on shell IC neuron activity can predict trial-by-trial outcomes, even when training data are restricted to neural activity occurring prior to mice’s instrumental actions. Thus in behaving animals, auditory midbrain neurons transmit a population code that reflects a joint representation of sound and action.

Pierre Apostolides, Ph.D.

Michigan Neuroscience Institute Affiliate
Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery
Assistant Professor of Molecular and Integrative Physiology