Literature DB >> 18815248

Tripartite mechanism of extinction suggested by dopamine neuron activity and temporal difference model.

Wei-Xing Pan1, Robert Schmidt, Jeffery R Wickens, Brian I Hyland.   

Abstract

Extinction of behavior enables adaptation to a changing world and is crucial for recovery from disorders such as phobias and drug addiction. However, the brain mechanisms underlying behavioral extinction remain poorly understood. Midbrain dopamine (DA) neurons appear to play a central role in most acquisition processes of appetitive conditioning. Here, we show that the responses of putative DA neurons to conditioned reward predicting cues also dynamically encode two classical features of extinction: decrement in amplitude of previously learned excitatory responses and rebound of responding on subsequent retesting (spontaneous recovery). Crucially, this encoding involves development of inhibitory responses in the DA neurons, reflecting new, extinction-specific learning in the brain. We explored the implications of this finding by adding such inhibitory inputs to a standard temporal difference model of DA cell activity. We found that combining extinction-triggered plasticity of these inputs with a time-dependent spontaneous decay of weights, equivalent to a forgetting process as described in classical behavioral extinction literature, enabled the model to simulate several classical features of extinction. A key requirement to achieving spontaneous recovery was differential rates of spontaneous decay for weights representing original conditioning and for subsequent extinction learning. A testable prediction of the model is thus that differential decay properties exist within the wider circuits regulating DA cell activity. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that extinction processes at both cellular and behavioral levels involve a dynamic interaction between new (inhibitory) learning, forgetting, and unlearning.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18815248      PMCID: PMC6671219          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0255-08.2008

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


  42 in total

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8.  Over-expectation generated in a complex appetitive goal-tracking task is capable of inducing memory reconsolidation.

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Review 9.  Dopaminergic system in birdsong learning and maintenance.

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10.  Why do delusions persist?

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