| Literature DB >> 35192604 |
Kristin Kaduk1, Fadila Hadj-Bouziane2,3.
Abstract
To maintain homeostasis, our brain tracks the effort exerted during decision-making. A new study in PLOS Biology shows that the activity of noradrenergic neurons in the locus coeruleus (LC) reflects the effort exerted to face cognitive or physical challenges.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35192604 PMCID: PMC8863241 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3001545
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Fig 1LC noradrenergic neurons encode effortful decisions.
(A) Primates take decisions with the tendency to minimize costs while maximizing benefits. In the context of the experiment, costs involved either squeezing a grip more or less forcefully or waiting for more or less longer after releasing a lever while benefits involved different amounts of water. (B) Single-cell recordings were performed in the LC, a small nucleus in the brainstem that sends noradrenergic projections throughout the brain (in blue). (C) In 2 different tasks, the authors manipulated the level of physical effort animals had to exert on a grip (force, in purple) or the time delay after pressing a lever (delay, in blue) to earn various amounts of reward. In a third task (detection), animals had to apply a minimal force on a grip to receive a reward without any delay (in yellow). In the first 2 tasks, monkeys tended to avoid effortful options that entailed small amounts of reward, longer delays (in blue), or stronger physical forces (in purple), while in the detection task, there was no evidence for any bias. (D) The peristimulus time histogram symbolizes the mean firing rate of the population of LC neurons over time for the 3 tasks (delay, force, detection, in blue, purple, and yellow, respectively) aligned on the action onset. Right before the decision to act, LC neurons displayed a brief burst of activity only for the delay- and force-discounting tasks. Of note, the magnitude of this response was tightly related to the monkeys’ reaction time and reflected their willingness to perform the trial depending on its value and constraints. This activity was higher when the animal decided to engage in more demanding options (less reward, longer delay, or stronger grip) and was not modulated in the detection task. In addition, the activity also increased with more demanding physical effort in the force-discounting task. Together, these results suggest that the LC plays an important role in initiating and performing effortful actions. Given the widespread projections of the LC, these signals could be broadcasted toward other brain areas where increased NA availability could adjust sensory and cognitive processes to promote goal-directed behavior. LC, locus coeruleus; NA, noradrenaline.