Medial orbitofrontal neurons preferentially signal cues predicting changes in reward during unblocking

N Lopatina, MA McDannald, CV Styer… - Journal of …, 2016 - Soc Neuroscience
N Lopatina, MA McDannald, CV Styer, JF Peterson, BF Sadacca, JF Cheer, G Schoenbaum
Journal of Neuroscience, 2016Soc Neuroscience
The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) has been broadly implicated in the ability to use the current
value of expected outcomes to guide behavior. Although value correlates have been
prominently reported in lateral OFC, they are more often associated with more medial areas.
Further, recent studies in primates have suggested a dissociation in which the lateral OFC is
involved in credit assignment and representation of reward identity and more medial areas
are critical to representing value. Previously, we used unblocking to test more specifically …
The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) has been broadly implicated in the ability to use the current value of expected outcomes to guide behavior. Although value correlates have been prominently reported in lateral OFC, they are more often associated with more medial areas. Further, recent studies in primates have suggested a dissociation in which the lateral OFC is involved in credit assignment and representation of reward identity and more medial areas are critical to representing value. Previously, we used unblocking to test more specifically what information about outcomes is represented by OFC neurons in rats; consistent with the proposed dichotomy between the lateral and medial OFC, we found relatively little linear value coding in the lateral OFC . Here we have repeated this experiment, recording in the medial OFC, to test whether such value signals might be found there. Neurons were recorded in an unblocking task as rats learned about cues that signaled either more, less, or the same amount of reward. We found that medial OFC neurons acquired responses to these cues; however, these responses did not signal different reward values across cues. Surprisingly, we found that cells developed responses to cues predicting a change, particularly a decrease, in reward value. This is consistent with a special role for medial OFC in representing current value to support devaluation/revaluation sensitive changes in behavior.
SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT This study uniquely examines encoding in rodent mOFC at the single-unit level in response to cues that predict more, less, or no change in reward in rats during training in a Pavlovian unblocking task, finding more cells responding to change-predictive cues and stronger activity in response to cues predictive of less reward.
Soc Neuroscience
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