Author:
Bohn Ines,Giertler Christian,Hauber Wolfgang
Abstract
The orbital prefrontal cortex (OPFC) is part of a circuitry mediating the
perception of reward and the initiation of adaptive behavioral responses. We
investigated whether the OPFC is involved in guidance of the speed of
instrumental behavior by visuospatial stimuli predictive of different reward
magnitudes. Unoperated rats, sham-lesioned rats, and rats with bilateral
lesions of the OPFC by N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) were trained in a
visuospatial discrimination task. The task required a lever press on the
illuminated lever of two available to obtain a food reward. Different reward
magnitudes were permanently assigned to lever presses to respective sides of
the operant chamber; that is, responses to one lever (e.g., the left one) were
always rewarded with one pellet and responses to the other lever with five
pellets. On each trial, the position of the illuminated lever was
pseudorandomly determined in advance. Results revealed that OPFC lesions did
not impair acquisition of the task, as the speed of conditioned responses was
significantly shorter with expectancy of a high reward magnitude. In addition,
during reversal, shift and reshift of lever position–reward magnitude
contingencies and under extinction conditions, performance of the
OPFC-lesioned and control groups did not differ. It is concluded that the OPFC
in rats might not be critical for adapting behavioral responses to changes of
stimulus–reward magnitude contingencies signaled by visuospatial
cues.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
7 articles.
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