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Activation of serotonin neurons promotes active exploitation in a probabilistic foraging task

Authors :
Dario Sarra
Dhruba Banerjee
Eran Lottem
Matthijs N. oude Lohuis
Zachary F. Mainen
Pietro Vertechi
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2017.

Abstract

The neuromodulator serotonin (5-HT) has been implicated in a variety of functions that involve patience or impulse control. For example, activation of 5-HT neurons promotes waiting for delayed rewards. Many of these effects are consistent with a long-standing theory that 5-HT promotes behavioral inhibition, a motivational bias favoring passive over active behaviors. To further test this idea, we studied the impact of 5-HT in a probabilistic foraging task, in which mice must learn the statistics of the environment and infer when to leave a depleted foraging site for the next. Critically, mice were required to actively nose poke in order to exploit a given site. We found that optogenetic activation of 5-HT neurons in the dorsal raphe nucleus increased the willingness of mice to actively attempt to exploit a reward site before giving up. These results indicate that behavioral inhibition is not an adequate description of 5-HT function and suggest that a unified account must be based on a higher-order function.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e68469ca9cc376425b8f1b6b7609482d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/170472