Department of Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United States.
Department of Behavioral Neuroscience, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, United States.
Elife. 2017 Oct 23;6:e30056. doi: 10.7554/eLife.30056.
Actions motivated by rewards are often associated with risk of punishment. Little is known about the neural representation of punishment risk during reward-seeking behavior. We modeled this circumstance in rats by designing a task where actions were consistently rewarded but probabilistically punished. Spike activity and local field potentials were recorded during task performance simultaneously from VTA and mPFC, two reciprocally connected regions implicated in reward-seeking and aversive behaviors. At the single unit level, we found that ensembles of putative dopamine and non-dopamine VTA neurons and mPFC neurons encode the relationship between action and punishment. At the network level, we found that coherent theta oscillations synchronize VTA and mPFC in a bottom-up direction, effectively phase-modulating the neuronal spike activity in the two regions during punishment-free actions. This synchrony declined as a function of punishment probability, suggesting that during reward-seeking actions, risk of punishment diminishes VTA-driven neural synchrony between the two regions.
由奖励驱动的行为通常与受惩罚的风险有关。在寻求奖励的行为过程中,关于惩罚风险的神经表示知之甚少。我们通过设计一项任务在大鼠中模拟这种情况,在该任务中,动作始终得到奖励,但概率受到惩罚。在任务执行过程中,同时从 VTA 和 mPFC 记录尖峰活动和局部场电位,这两个区域在寻求奖励和厌恶行为中相互连接。在单个单元水平上,我们发现 VTA 和 mPFC 中的假定多巴胺和非多巴胺神经元以及 mPFC 神经元的集合编码了动作和惩罚之间的关系。在网络水平上,我们发现连贯的 theta 振荡以自下而上的方向同步 VTA 和 mPFC,有效地在无惩罚动作期间调制两个区域中的神经元尖峰活动的相位。这种同步性随着惩罚概率的增加而降低,这表明在寻求奖励的行为中,惩罚的风险降低了两个区域之间由 VTA 驱动的神经同步性。