Authors: Mendoza JA, Lafferty CK, Yang AK, Britt JP
Cue-Evoked Dopamine Neuron Activity Helps Maintain but Does Not Encode Expected Value.
Cell Rep. 2019 Nov 05;29(6):1429-1437.e3
Authors: Mendoza JA, Lafferty CK, Yang AK, Britt JP
Abstract
Cue-evoked midbrain dopamine (DA) neuron activity reflects expected value, but its influence on reward assessment is unclear. In mice performing a trial-based operant task, we test if bidirectional manipulations of cue or operant-associated DA neuron activity drive learning as a result of under- or overexpectation of reward value. We target optogenetic manipulations to different components of forced trials, when only one lever is presented, and assess lever biases on choice trials in the absence of photomanipulation. Although lever biases are demonstrated to be flexible and sensitive to changes in expected value, augmentation of cue or operant-associated DA signaling does not significantly alter choice behavior, and blunting DA signaling during any component of the forced trials reduces choice trial responses on the associated lever. These data suggest cue-evoked DA helps maintain cue-value associations but does not encode expected value as to set the benchmark against which received reward is judged.
PMID: 31693885 [PubMed - in process]
Keywords: calcium imaging; dopamine; expected value; motivation; optogenetics; overexpectation; reinforcement learning; reward prediction error; ventral tegmental area;
PubMed: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31693885?dopt=Abstract
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.09.077