Literature DB >> 26493973

The ventral hippocampus, but not the dorsal hippocampus is critical for learned approach-avoidance decision making.

Anett Schumacher1, Ekaterina Vlassov1, Rutsuko Ito1,2.   

Abstract

The resolution of an approach-avoidance conflict induced by ambivalent information involves the appraisal of the incentive value of the outcomes and associated stimuli to orchestrate an appropriate behavioral response. Much research has been directed at delineating the neural circuitry underlying approach motivation and avoidance motivation separately. Very little research, however, has examined the neural substrates engaged at the point of decision making when opposing incentive motivations are experienced simultaneously. We hereby examine the role of the dorsal and ventral hippocampus (HPC) in a novel approach-avoidance decision making paradigm, revisiting a once popular theory of HPC function, which posited the HPC to be the driving force of a behavioral inhibition system that is activated in situations of imminent threat. Rats received pre-training excitotoxic lesions of the dorsal or ventral HPC, and were trained to associate different non-spatial cues with appetitive, aversive and neutral outcomes in three separate arms of the radial maze. On the final day of testing, a state of approach-avoidance conflict was induced by simultaneously presenting two cues of opposite valences, and comparing the time the rats spent interacting with the superimposed 'conflict' cue, and the neutral cue. The ventral HPC-lesioned group showed significant preference for the conflict cue over the neutral cue, compared to the dorsal HPC-lesioned, and control groups. Thus, we provide evidence that the ventral, but not dorsal HPC, is a crucial component of the neural circuitry concerned with exerting inhibitory control over approach tendencies under circumstances in which motivational conflict is experienced.
© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  conditioned cue avoidance; conditioned cue preference; decision making; hippocampus; incentive motivation

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26493973     DOI: 10.1002/hipo.22542

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hippocampus        ISSN: 1050-9631            Impact factor:   3.899


  25 in total

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7.  Dissociable roles of the nucleus accumbens D1 and D2 receptors in regulating cue-elicited approach-avoidance conflict decision-making.

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8.  Default Mode Network Subsystems are Differentially Disrupted in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.

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9.  The Outward Spiral: A vicious cycle model of obesity and cognitive dysfunction.

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Review 10.  Reframing appetitive reinforcement learning and reward valuation as effects mediated by hippocampal-dependent behavioral inhibition.

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