Dopamine neurons encode the better option in rats deciding between differently delayed or sized rewards

MR Roesch, DJ Calu, G Schoenbaum - Nature neuroscience, 2007 - nature.com
Nature neuroscience, 2007nature.com
The dopamine system is thought to be involved in making decisions about reward. Here we
recorded from the ventral tegmental area in rats learning to choose between differently
delayed and sized rewards. As expected, the activity of many putative dopamine neurons
reflected reward prediction errors, changing when the value of the reward increased or
decreased unexpectedly. During learning, neural responses to reward in these neurons
waned and responses to cues that predicted reward emerged. Notably, this cue-evoked …
Abstract
The dopamine system is thought to be involved in making decisions about reward. Here we recorded from the ventral tegmental area in rats learning to choose between differently delayed and sized rewards. As expected, the activity of many putative dopamine neurons reflected reward prediction errors, changing when the value of the reward increased or decreased unexpectedly. During learning, neural responses to reward in these neurons waned and responses to cues that predicted reward emerged. Notably, this cue-evoked activity varied with size and delay. Moreover, when rats were given a choice between two differently valued outcomes, the activity of the neurons initially reflected the more valuable option, even when it was not subsequently selected.
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