Shohamy Daphna, Myers Catherine E, Grossman Steven, Sage Jacob, Gluck Mark A
Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience, Rutgers University, 197 University Avenue, Newark, NJ, USA.
Behav Brain Res. 2005 Jan 30;156(2):191-9. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2004.05.023.
Electrophysiological and computational studies suggest that nigro-striatal dopamine may play an important role in learning about sequences of environmentally important stimuli, particularly when this learning is based upon step-by-step associations between stimuli, such as in second-order conditioning. If so, one would predict that disruption of the midbrain dopamine system--such as occurs in Parkinson's disease--may lead to deficits on tasks that rely upon such learning processes. This hypothesis was tested using a "chaining" task, in which each additional link in a sequence of stimuli leading to reward is trained step-by-step, until a full sequence is learned. We further examined how medication (L-dopa) affects this type of learning. As predicted, we found that Parkinson's patients tested 'off' L-dopa performed as well as controls during the first phase of this task, when required to learn a simple stimulus-response association, but were impaired at learning the full sequence of stimuli. In contrast, we found that Parkinson's patients tested 'on' L-dopa performed better than those tested 'off', and no worse than controls, on all phases of the task. These findings suggest that the loss of dopamine that occurs in Parkinson's disease can lead to specific learning impairments that are predicted by electrophysiological and computational studies, and that enhancing dopamine levels with L-dopa alleviates this deficit. This last result raises questions regarding the mechanisms by which midbrain dopamine modulates learning in Parkinson's disease, and how L-dopa affects these processes.
电生理学和计算研究表明,黑质-纹状体多巴胺可能在学习环境中重要刺激序列方面发挥重要作用,特别是当这种学习基于刺激之间的逐步关联时,比如在二级条件反射中。如果是这样,人们可以预测中脑多巴胺系统的破坏——如在帕金森病中发生的那样——可能导致依赖于这种学习过程的任务出现缺陷。使用“连锁”任务对这一假设进行了测试,在该任务中,导致奖励的刺激序列中的每个额外环节都是逐步训练的,直到学会完整的序列。我们进一步研究了药物(左旋多巴)如何影响这种类型的学习。正如所预测的,我们发现,在这项任务的第一阶段,即要求学习简单的刺激-反应关联时,未服用左旋多巴的帕金森病患者表现与对照组一样好,但在学习完整的刺激序列时受损。相比之下,我们发现,服用左旋多巴的帕金森病患者在任务的所有阶段都比未服用者表现更好,且不比对照组差。这些发现表明,帕金森病中发生的多巴胺丧失会导致电生理学和计算研究所预测的特定学习障碍,而用左旋多巴提高多巴胺水平可缓解这种缺陷。最后这一结果引发了关于中脑多巴胺调节帕金森病学习的机制以及左旋多巴如何影响这些过程的问题。