Antoniades Chrystalina A, Bogacz Rafal, Kennard Christopher, FitzGerald James J, Aziz Tipu, Green Alexander L
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences and
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences and Medical Research Council Anatomical Neuropharmacology Unit, Department of Pharmacology, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3TH, United Kingdom.
J Neurosci. 2014 Aug 13;34(33):10844-52. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1065-14.2014.
The cortico-basal-ganglia circuit plays a critical role in decision making on the basis of probabilistic information. Computational models have suggested how this circuit could compute the probabilities of actions being appropriate according to Bayes' theorem. These models predict that the subthalamic nucleus (STN) provides feedback that normalizes the neural representation of probabilities, such that if the probability of one action increases, the probabilities of all other available actions decrease. Here we report the results of an experiment testing a prediction of this theory that disrupting information processing in the STN with deep brain stimulation should abolish the normalization of the neural representation of probabilities. In our experiment, we asked patients with Parkinson's disease to saccade to a target that could appear in one of two locations, and the probability of the target appearing in each location was periodically changed. When the stimulator was switched off, the target probability affected the reaction times (RT) of patients in a similar way to healthy participants. Specifically, the RTs were shorter for more probable targets and, importantly, they were longer for the unlikely targets. When the stimulator was switched on, the patients were still faster for more probable targets, but critically they did not increase RTs as the target was becoming less likely. This pattern of results is consistent with the prediction of the model that the patients on DBS no longer normalized their neural representation of prior probabilities. We discuss alternative explanations for the data in the context of other published results.
皮质-基底神经节回路在基于概率信息的决策中起着关键作用。计算模型已经提出了该回路如何根据贝叶斯定理计算行动适当性的概率。这些模型预测,丘脑底核(STN)提供反馈,使概率的神经表征标准化,这样如果一个行动的概率增加,所有其他可用行动的概率就会降低。在此,我们报告了一项实验结果,该实验测试了这一理论的一个预测,即通过深部脑刺激破坏STN中的信息处理应该会消除概率神经表征的标准化。在我们的实验中,我们要求帕金森病患者向可能出现在两个位置之一的目标进行扫视,并且目标出现在每个位置的概率会定期变化。当刺激器关闭时,目标概率对患者反应时间(RT)的影响与健康参与者类似。具体而言,对于更可能出现的目标,反应时间更短,重要的是,对于不太可能出现的目标,反应时间更长。当刺激器打开时,患者对于更可能出现的目标仍然更快,但关键的是,随着目标出现可能性降低,他们的反应时间并没有增加。这种结果模式与模型的预测一致,即接受深部脑刺激的患者不再对其先验概率的神经表征进行标准化。我们结合其他已发表的结果讨论了对这些数据的其他解释。