Habit learning supported by efficiently controlled network dynamics in naive macaque monkeys
Karol P. Szymula, Fabio Pasqualetti, Ann M. Graybiel, Theresa M., Desrochers, and Danielle S. Bassett

TL;DR
This study develops a formal theory of network energetics to understand how neural circuits support habit learning in macaque monkeys, linking brain state transitions to energy requirements and behavioral patterns.
Contribution
It introduces a novel theoretical framework connecting effective connectivity, brain state transitions, and energy costs in neural circuits during habit learning.
Findings
Lower energy needed for transitions between similar saccade patterns
Less entropic saccade selection correlates with reduced energy requirements
Resilience of energy-behavior relationship despite connectivity disruptions
Abstract
Primates display a marked ability to learn habits in uncertain and dynamic environments. The associated perceptions and actions of such habits engage distributed neural circuits. Yet, precisely how such circuits support the computations necessary for habit learning remain far from understood. Here we construct a formal theory of network energetics to account for how changes in brain state produce changes in sequential behavior. We exercise the theory in the context of multi-unit recordings spanning the caudate nucleus, prefrontal cortex, and frontal eyefields of female macaque monkeys engaged in 60-180 sessions of a free scan task that induces motor habits. The theory relies on the determination of effective connectivity between recording channels, and on the stipulation that a brain state is taken to be the trial-specific firing rate across those channels. The theory then predicts how…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural dynamics and brain function · Memory and Neural Mechanisms · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
