(2 of 11) When they expected an odour (rule2) which didn't arrive, they switched rules, and started responding based on rule 1, the very next trial, and stayed very accurate for the rest of the block, and did this over and over allowing us to zoom in on the rare moment of prediction mismatch!
(4 of 11) ~10% of all ACC neurons show this, a big number considering PFC responses. And we didn't see this signal by chance/movement artefacts, eg.identical recordings from V1 didn't show it. Also this signal is different based on where cells project to: mismatch signals are excluded from ACC neurons projecting to the striatum
(8 of 11) Anyone who's trained a mouse will know, if they don't get it right a few times they will do exploratory licks. Mice with ACC silenced ignore tens of trials of visual stimuli, rewarded if they would lick, but they are stuck in the odour block rule: ignore visual, wait for odour...
And once they do eventually switch, they do near-perfect performance the rest of the block, with ACC still silenced! We also did a fun single-trial Un-silencing experiment to nail this point. So ACC is truly a gate, allowing transitions between cognitive states (and PL is not)
Finally, what is the circuit for comparing prediction and reality? Amazing prior work (Keller lab) shows VIP & SOM interneurons are key. So we activated VIPs while measuring mismatch signals. All-optical method so we are sure the manipulation caused disinhibition as expected
(9 of 11) VIP activation almost abolished the mismatch signal! (Since the manipulation was only in the imaging site, not bilateral, this didn't affect behaviour). So VIP cells are key to generating the prediction error signal. This effect (riding on disinhibition by VIPs) constrains circuit models of mismatch
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(3 of 11) This is not just a surprise, like oddball tasks. This is a prediction mismatch which has demonstrable behavioural consequences - the mice switch behaviour using it. A complete switch in mental rules happens at a well defined moment - the mouse proves this to us by its behaviour
We recorded from the ACC, and aligned activity to the moment the odour was expected to arrive but didn't, and found neurons with a clear response - to the NON occurrence of an expected odour. Remember nothing happened at this moment - only the expectation violation.