Literature DB >> 17428967

Amygdala neurons differentially encode motivation and reinforcement.

Kay M Tye1, Patricia H Janak.   

Abstract

Lesion studies demonstrate that the basolateral amygdala complex (BLA) is important for assigning motivational significance to sensory stimuli, but little is known about how this information is encoded. We used in vivo electrophysiology procedures to investigate how the amygdala encodes motivating and reinforcing properties of cues that induce reinstatement of reward-seeking behavior. Two groups of rats were trained to respond to a sucrose reward. The "paired" group was trained with a reward-predictive cue, whereas the "unpaired" group was trained with a randomly presented cue. Both groups underwent identical extinction and reinstatement procedures during which the reward was withheld. The proportion of neurons that were phasically cue responsive during reinstatement was significantly higher in the paired group (46 of 100) than in the unpaired group (8 of 112). Cues that induce reward-seeking behavior can do so by acting as incentives or reinforcers. Distinct populations of neurons responded to the cue in trials in which the cue acted as an incentive, triggering a motivated reward-seeking state, or as a reinforcer, supporting continued instrumental responding. The incentive motivation-encoding population of neurons (34 of 46 cue-responsive neurons; 74%) extinguished in temporal agreement with a decrease in the rate of instrumental responding. The conditioned reinforcement-encoding population of neurons (12 of 46 cue-responsive neurons; 26%) maintained their response for the duration of cue-reinforced instrumental responding. These data demonstrate that separate populations of cue-responsive neurons in the BLA encode the motivating or reinforcing properties of a cue previously associated with a reward.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17428967      PMCID: PMC6672525          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5281-06.2007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  56 in total

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Review 2.  Neurophysiology of Reward-Guided Behavior: Correlates Related to Predictions, Value, Motivation, Errors, Attention, and Action.

Authors:  Gregory B Bissonette; Matthew R Roesch
Journal:  Curr Top Behav Neurosci       Date:  2016

3.  Rapid strengthening of thalamo-amygdala synapses mediates cue-reward learning.

Authors:  Kay M Tye; Garret D Stuber; Bram de Ridder; Antonello Bonci; Patricia H Janak
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2008-05-11       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Substantial similarity in amygdala neuronal activity during conditioned appetitive and aversive emotional arousal.

Authors:  Steven J Shabel; Patricia H Janak
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2009-08-14       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 5.  Re-valuing the amygdala.

Authors:  Sara E Morrison; C Daniel Salzman
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2010-03-17       Impact factor: 6.627

6.  Basolateral amygdala responds robustly to social calls: spiking characteristics of single unit activity.

Authors:  Robert T Naumann; Jagmeet S Kanwal
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2011-03-02       Impact factor: 2.714

7.  Basolateral Amygdala to Orbitofrontal Cortex Projections Enable Cue-Triggered Reward Expectations.

Authors:  Nina T Lichtenberg; Zachary T Pennington; Sandra M Holley; Venuz Y Greenfield; Carlos Cepeda; Michael S Levine; Kate M Wassum
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2017-07-25       Impact factor: 6.167

8.  Fear conditioned discrimination of frequency modulated sweeps within species-specific calls of mustached bats.

Authors:  Jie Ma; Robert T Naumann; Jagmeet S Kanwal
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-05-12       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Ethanol seeking triggered by environmental context is attenuated by blocking dopamine D1 receptors in the nucleus accumbens core and shell in rats.

Authors:  Nadia Chaudhri; Lacey L Sahuque; Patricia H Janak
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2009-09-25       Impact factor: 4.530

10.  Responses of amygdala neurons to positive reward-predicting stimuli depend on background reward (contingency) rather than stimulus-reward pairing (contiguity).

Authors:  Maria A Bermudez; Wolfram Schultz
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2009-12-23       Impact factor: 2.714

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