Distinct representations of economic variables across regions and projections of the frontal cortex
作者
Antara Majumdar,Caitlin Ashcroft,Matthias Fritsche,Sandra Tan,Peter Zatka-Haas,Orsolya Folsz,N. Walker,Leah Mistry,Anita M. Rominto,Marko Tvrdic,Zoltán Molnár,Huriye Atilgan,Adam M. Packer,Simon J. B. Butt,Armin Lak
Economic decision-making requires evaluating information about available options, such as their expected value and economic risk. Previous studies have shown that frontal cortical neurons encode these variables, but how this encoding is structured across different frontal regions and projection pathways remains unclear. We developed a decision-making task for head-fixed mice in which we varied the expected value and risk associated with reward-predicting stimuli. Using large-scale electrophysiology, two-photon imaging, and projection-specific optotagging, we identified distinct spatial gradients for these variables, with stronger expected value coding in dorsal frontal regions and stronger risk coding in medial regions. We then demonstrated that this encoding further depends on the neuronal projections: frontal neurons projecting to the dorsomedial striatum and claustrum differentially encoded economic variables. Our findings illustrate that frontal cortical representation of economic variables is jointly determined by spatial organization and downstream connectivity of neurons, revealing a structured, multi-scale code for economic variables.