Hualou Liang and Hongbin Wang
Top-Down Anticipatory Control in Prefrontal Cortex.
Theory in Biosciences 122 (2003) 70-86.
Abstract:
The prefrontal cortex has been implicated in a wide variety of executive
functions, many involving some form of anticipatory attention. Anticipatory
attention involves the pre-selection of specific sensory circuits to allow
fast and efficient stimulus processing and a subsequently fast and accurate
response. It is generally agreed that the prefrontal cortex plays a critical
role in anticipatory attention by exerting a facilitatory "top-down" bias
on sensory pathways. In this paper we review recent results indicating that
synchronized activity in prefrontal cortex, during anticipation of visual
stimulus, can predict features of early visual stimulus processing and behavioral
response. Although the mechanisms involved in anticipatory attention are
still largely unknown, we argue that the synchronized oscillation in prefrontal
cortex is a plausible candidate during sustained visual anticipation. We
further propose a learning hypothesis that explains how this top-down anticipatory
control in prefrontal cortex is learned based on accumulated prior experience
by adopting a Temporal Difference learning algorithm.