Vectorized instructive signals in cortical dendrites
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Open access
- Published: 25 February 2026
Vectorized instructive signals in cortical dendrites
- Valerio Francioni1,2,
- Vincent D. Tang1,2 na1,
- Enrique H. S. Toloza1,3,4 na1,
- Zilan Ding1,2 na1,
- Norma J. Brown1,2 &
- …
- Mark T. Harnett
orcid.org/0000-0002-5301-11391,2
Nature
(2026)Cite this article
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#### Subjects
- Cortex
- Neural circuits
Abstract
Vectorization of teaching signals is a key element of almost all modern machine learning algorithms, including backpropagation, target propagation and reinforcement learning. Vectorization allows a scalable and computationally efficient solution to the credit assignment problem by tailoring instructive signals to individual neurons. Recent theoretical models have suggested that neural circuits could implement single-phase vectorized learning at the cellular level by processing feedforward and feedback information streams in separate dendritic compartments1,2,3,4,5. This presents a compelling, but untested, hypothesis for how cortical circuits could solve credit assignment in the brain. Here we used a neurofeedback brain–computer interface task with an experimenter-defined reward function to test for vectorized instructive signals in dendrites. We trained mice to modulate the activity of two spatially intermingled populations (four or five neurons each) of layer 5 pyramidal neurons in the retrosplenial cortex to rotate a visual grating towards a target orientation while we recorded GCaMP activity from somas and corresponding distal apical dendrites. We observed that the relative magnitudes of somatic and dendritic signals could be predicted using the activity of the surrounding network and contained information about task-related variables that could serve as instructive signals, including reward and error. The signs of these putative teaching signals depended on the causal role of individual neurons in the task and predicted changes in overall activity over the course of learning. Furthermore, targeted optogenetic perturbation of these signals disrupted learning. These results demonstrate a vectorized instructive signal in the brain, implemented via semi-independent computation in cortical dendrites, unveiling a potential mechanism for solving credit assignment in the brain.
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[Original source](https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10190-7)