Lee Hyunchan, Hikosaka Okihide
Laboratory of Sensorimotor Research, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, MD, United States.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2022 Mar 14;16:815461. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2022.815461. eCollection 2022.
For many animals, social interaction may have intrinsic reward value over and above its utility as a means to the desired end. Eye contact is the starting point of interactions in many social animals, including primates, and abnormal patterns of eye contact are present in many mental disorders. Whereas abundant previous studies have shown that negative emotions such as fear strongly affect eye contact behavior, modulation of eye contact by reward has received scant attention. Here we recorded eye movement patterns and neural activity in lateral habenula while monkeys viewed faces in the context of Pavlovian and instrumental conditioning tasks. Faces associated with larger rewards spontaneously elicited longer periods of eye contact from the monkeys, even though this behavior was not required or advantaged in the task. Concurrently, lateral habenula neurons were suppressed by faces signaling high value and excited by faces signaling low value. These results suggest that the reward signaling of lateral habenula may contribute to social behavior and disorders, presumably through its connections with the basal ganglia.
对于许多动物来说,社交互动可能具有内在的奖励价值,这种价值超越了它作为实现期望目标手段的效用。眼神交流是包括灵长类动物在内的许多社交动物互动的起点,许多精神障碍中都存在异常的眼神交流模式。尽管之前有大量研究表明,恐惧等负面情绪会强烈影响眼神交流行为,但奖励对眼神交流的调节却很少受到关注。在这里,我们记录了猴子在经典条件反射和操作性条件反射任务中观看面部时的眼动模式和外侧缰核的神经活动。与更大奖励相关的面部会自发地引起猴子更长时间的眼神交流,即使这种行为在任务中并非必需或有益。同时,外侧缰核神经元被高价值信号的面部抑制,被低价值信号的面部兴奋。这些结果表明,外侧缰核的奖励信号可能通过其与基底神经节的连接,对社交行为和障碍产生影响。