Authors: Maes EJP, Sharpe MJ, Usypchuk AA, Lozzi M, Chang CY, Gardner MPH, Schoenbaum G, Iordanova MD
Causal evidence supporting the proposal that dopamine transients function as temporal difference prediction errors.
Nat Neurosci. 2020 Jan 20;:
Authors: Maes EJP, Sharpe MJ, Usypchuk AA, Lozzi M, Chang CY, Gardner MPH, Schoenbaum G, Iordanova MD
Abstract
Reward-evoked dopamine transients are well established as prediction errors. However, the central tenet of temporal difference accounts-that similar transients evoked by reward-predictive cues also function as errors-remains untested. In the present communication we addressed this by showing that optogenetically shunting dopamine activity at the start of a reward-predicting cue prevents second-order conditioning without affecting blocking. These results indicate that cue-evoked transients function as temporal-difference prediction errors rather than reward predictions.
PMID: 31959935 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
PubMed: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31959935?dopt=Abstract
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0574-1