Scientific Data (Jan 2024)

Dataset of human-single neuron activity during a Sternberg working memory task

  • Michael Kyzar,
  • Jan Kamiński,
  • Aneta Brzezicka,
  • Chrystal M. Reed,
  • Jeffrey M. Chung,
  • Adam N. Mamelak,
  • Ueli Rutishauser

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-024-02943-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract We present a dataset of 1809 single neurons recorded from the human medial temporal lobe (amygdala and hippocampus) and medial frontal lobe (anterior cingulate cortex, pre-supplementary motor area, ventral medial prefrontal cortex) across 41 sessions from 21 patients that underwent seizure monitoring with depth electrodes. Subjects performed a screening task (907 neurons) to identify images for which highly selective cells were present. Subjects then performed a working memory task (902 neurons), in which they were sequentially presented with 1–3 images for which highly selective cells were present and, following a maintenance period, were asked if the probe was identical to one of the maintained images. This Neurodata Without Borders formatted dataset includes spike times, extracellular spike waveforms, stimuli presented, behavior, electrode locations, and subject demographics. As validation, we replicate previous findings on the selectivity of concept cells and their persistent activity during working memory maintenance. This large dataset of rare human single-neuron recordings and behavior enables the investigation of the neural mechanisms of working memory in humans.