Author:
Schweimer Judith,Hauber Wolfgang
Abstract
The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) plays a critical role in
stimulus-reinforcement learning and reward-guided selection of actions. Here
we conducted a series of experiments to further elucidate the role of the ACC
in instrumental behavior involving effort-based decision-making and
instrumental learning guided by reward-predictive stimuli. In Experiment 1,
rats were trained on a cost-benefit T-maze task in which they could either
choose to climb a barrier to obtain a high reward (four pellets) in one arm or
a low reward (two pellets) in the other with no barrier present. In line with
previous studies, our data reveal that rats with quinolinic acid lesions of
the ACC selected the response involving less work and smaller reward.
Experiment 2 demonstrates that breaking points of instrumental performance
under a progressive ratio schedule were similar in sham-lesioned and
ACC-lesioned rats. Thus, lesions of the ACC did not interfere with the effort
a rat is willing to expend to obtain a specific reward in this test. In a
subsequent task, we examined effort-based decision-making in a lever-press
task where rats had the choice between pressing a lever to receive preferred
food pellets under a progressive ratio schedule, or free feeding on a less
preferred food, i.e. lab chow. Results show that sham- and ACC-lesioned
animals had similar breaking points and ingested comparable amounts of
less-preferred food. Together, the results of Experiment 1 and 2 suggest that
the ACC plays a role in evaluating how much effort to expend for reward;
however, the ACC is not necessary in all situations requiring an assessment of
costs and benefits. In Experiment 3 we investigated learning and reversal
learning of instrumental responses guided by reward predictive stimuli. A
reaction time (RT) task demanding conditioned lever release was used in which
the upcoming reward magnitude (five vs. one food pellet) was signalled in
advance by discriminative visual stimuli. Results revealed that rats with ACC
lesions were able to discriminate reward magnitude-predictive stimuli and to
adapt instrumental behavior to reversed stimulus-reward magnitude
contingencies. Thus, in a simple discrimination task as used here, the ACC
appears not to be required to discriminate reward magnitude-predictive stimuli
and to use the learned significance of the stimuli to guide instrumental
behavior.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
127 articles.
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