Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Department of Pediatrics, University of Southern California.
Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Care, Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, Irvine Center for Addiction Neuroscience (ICAN), Center for the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory (CNLM), Center for Neural Circuit Mapping (CNCM), University of California Irvine School of Medicine.
J Exp Psychol Anim Learn Cogn. 2023 Jan;49(1):14-30. doi: 10.1037/xan0000348.
The Pavlovian-instrumental transfer (PIT) paradigm is widely used to assay the motivational influence of reward-predictive cues, reflected by their ability to invigorate instrumental behavior. Leading theories assume that a cue's motivational properties are tied to predicted reward value. We outline an alternative view that recognizes that reward-predictive cues may suppress rather than motivate instrumental behavior under certain conditions, an effect termed positive conditioned suppression. We posit that cues signaling imminent reward delivery tend to inhibit instrumental behavior, which is exploratory by nature, in order to facilitate efficient retrieval of the expected reward. According to this view, the motivation to engage in instrumental behavior during a cue should be inversely related to the value of the predicted reward, since there is more to lose by failing to secure a high-value reward than a low-value reward. We tested this hypothesis in rats using a PIT protocol known to induce positive conditioned suppression. In Experiment 1, cues signaling different reward magnitudes elicited distinct response patterns. Whereas the one-pellet cue increased instrumental behavior, cues signaling three or nine pellets suppressed instrumental behavior and elicited high levels of food-port activity. Experiment 2 found that reward-predictive cues suppressed instrumental behavior and increased food-port activity in a flexible manner that was disrupted by post-training reward devaluation. Further analyses suggest that these findings were not driven by overt competition between the instrumental and food-port responses. We discuss how the PIT task may provide a useful tool for studying cognitive control over cue-motivated behavior in rodents. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
巴甫洛夫式-工具性转移(PIT)范式被广泛用于检测奖励预测线索的动机影响,这种影响体现在它们激发工具性行为的能力上。主流理论假设,线索的动机属性与其预测的奖励价值有关。我们提出了一种替代观点,即认识到在某些条件下,奖励预测线索可能会抑制而不是激发工具性行为,这种效应被称为正条件性抑制。我们认为,预示着即将到来的奖励传递的线索往往会抑制工具性行为,因为与未能获得高价值奖励相比,未能获得低价值奖励会失去更多。根据这种观点,在线索期间从事工具性行为的动机应该与预测奖励的价值成反比,因为未能确保高价值奖励的损失比低价值奖励的损失更大。我们在大鼠中使用 PIT 协议来检验这一假设,该协议已知会引起正条件性抑制。在实验 1 中,信号不同奖励大小的线索引起了不同的反应模式。虽然一个小丸线索增加了工具性行为,但信号三个或九个小丸的线索抑制了工具性行为,并引起了高水平的食物端口活动。实验 2 发现,奖励预测线索以灵活的方式抑制了工具性行为并增加了食物端口活动,而这种灵活性在训练后奖励贬值时被打乱。进一步的分析表明,这些发现不是由工具性反应和食物端口反应之间的明显竞争驱动的。我们讨论了 PIT 任务如何为研究啮齿动物对线索驱动的行为的认知控制提供有用的工具。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。