Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA; Computational Neuroscience Center, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA; Department of Neurobiology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Cell Rep. 2022 Mar 29;38(13):110574. doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.110574.
Many motor skills are learned by comparing ongoing behavior to internal performance benchmarks. Dopamine neurons encode performance error in behavioral paradigms where error is externally induced, but it remains unknown whether dopamine also signals the quality of natural performance fluctuations. Here, we record dopamine neurons in singing birds and examine how spontaneous dopamine spiking activity correlates with natural fluctuations in ongoing song. Antidromically identified basal ganglia-projecting dopamine neurons correlate with recent, and not future, song variations, consistent with a role in evaluation, not production. Furthermore, maximal dopamine spiking occurs at a single vocal target, consistent with either actively maintaining the existing song or shifting the song to a nearby form. These data show that spontaneous dopamine spiking can evaluate natural behavioral fluctuations unperturbed by experimental events such as cues or rewards.
许多运动技能是通过将正在进行的行为与内部绩效基准进行比较来学习的。多巴胺神经元在行为范式中编码外部诱导的绩效误差,但尚不清楚多巴胺是否也能反映自然绩效波动的质量。在这里,我们在鸣禽中记录多巴胺神经元,并研究自发多巴胺放电活动与正在进行的歌声自然波动之间的相关性。逆行鉴定的基底神经节投射多巴胺神经元与最近的而非未来的歌声变化相关,与评估而非产生的作用一致。此外,最大的多巴胺放电发生在单个声音目标上,这与主动维持现有的歌声或将歌声转换为附近的形式一致。这些数据表明,自发的多巴胺放电可以评估不受实验事件(如提示或奖励)干扰的自然行为波动。