Roesch Matthew R, Olson Carl R
Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, Mellon Institute, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213-2683, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2003 Sep;90(3):1766-89. doi: 10.1152/jn.00019.2003. Epub 2003 Jun 11.
In several regions of the macaque brain, neurons fire during delayed response tasks at a rate determined by the value of the reward expected at the end of the trial. The activity of these neurons might be related either to the internal representation of the appetitive value of the expected reward or to motivation-dependent variations in the monkey's level of motor preparation or motor output. According to the first interpretation, reward-related activity should be most prominent in areas affiliated with the limbic system. According to the second interpretation, it should be most prominent in areas affiliated with the motor system. To distinguish between these alternatives, we carried out single-neuron recording while monkeys performed a memory-guided saccade task in which a visual cue presented early in each trial indicated whether the reward would be large or small. Neuronal activity accompanying task performance was monitored in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (PFC), the frontal eye field (FEF), a transitional zone caudal to the frontal eye field (FEF/PM), premotor cortex (PM), the supplementary eye field (SEF), and the rostral part of the supplementary motor area (SMAr). The tendency for neuronal activity to increase after cues that predicted a large reward became progressively stronger in progressively more posterior areas both in the lateral sector of the frontal lobe (PFC < FEF < FEF/PM < PM) and in the medial sector (SEF < SMAr). The very strong reward-related activity of premotor neurons was presumably attributable to the monkey's motivation-dependent level of motor preparation or motor output. This finding points to the need to determine whether reward-related activity in other nonlimbic brain areas, including dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the dorsal striatum, genuinely represents the value of the expected reward or, alternatively, is related to motivational modulation of motor signals.
在猕猴大脑的几个区域,神经元在延迟反应任务期间放电,其放电速率由试验结束时预期奖励的价值决定。这些神经元的活动可能与预期奖励的欲望价值的内部表征有关,也可能与猴子运动准备或运动输出水平的动机依赖性变化有关。根据第一种解释,与奖励相关的活动在与边缘系统相关的区域应该最为突出。根据第二种解释,它在与运动系统相关的区域应该最为突出。为了区分这些可能性,我们在猴子执行记忆引导的扫视任务时进行了单神经元记录,在每个试验早期呈现的视觉线索表明奖励是大还是小。在背外侧前额叶皮层(PFC)、额叶眼区(FEF)、额叶眼区尾侧的过渡区(FEF/PM)、运动前皮层(PM)、辅助眼区(SEF)和辅助运动区的嘴侧部分(SMAr)监测伴随任务执行的神经元活动。在额叶外侧区(PFC < FEF < FEF/PM < PM)和内侧区(SEF < SMAr),预测大奖励的线索后神经元活动增加的趋势在越来越靠后的区域逐渐增强。运动前神经元非常强烈的与奖励相关的活动可能归因于猴子运动准备或运动输出的动机依赖性水平。这一发现表明需要确定其他非边缘脑区,包括背外侧前额叶皮层和背侧纹状体中与奖励相关的活动是真正代表预期奖励的价值,还是与运动信号的动机调节有关。