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Ventral Pallidal Representation of Pavlovian Cues and Reward: Population and Rate Codes


By szekany - Posted on 18 August 2009

TitleVentral Pallidal Representation of Pavlovian Cues and Reward: Population and Rate Codes
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2004
AuthorsTindell, A. J., Berridge Kent C., and Aldridge J. Wayne
JournalJournal of Neuroscience
Volume24
Issue5
Pagination1058 - 1069
Date Published02/2004
ISSN1529-2401
Abstract

We recorded neural activity in the ventral pallidum (VP) while rats learned a pavlovian reward association. Rats learned to distinguish a tone that predicted sucrose pellets (CS_) from a different tone that predicted nothing (CS_). Many VP units became responsive to CS_, but few units responded to CS_. When two CS_ were encountered sequentially, the earliest predictor of reward became most potent. Many VP units were also activated when the sucrose reward was received [unconditioned stimulus (UCS)]. These VP units for UCS remained responsive to sucrose reward after learning, even when sucrose was already predicted by CS_. Neural representation of reward learning and reward itself was characterized by population codes. The population of units that responded to CS_increased with learning, whereas the population that responded to UCS did not change. A relative firing rate code also represented the identities of conditioned stimuli and UCS. Firing rate differences among stimuli were acquired early and remained stable during subsequent training, whereas population codes and behavioral conditioned responses continued to develop during subsequent training. Thus, the VP makes use of dynamic CS population and rate codes to encode pavlovian reward cues in reward learning and uses stable UCS population and firing codes to encode sucrose reward itself.

DOI10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1437-03.2004
Short TitleJournal of Neuroscience
AttachmentSize
tindell, berridge & aldridge vp ventral pallidum representation of pavlovian cues j neurosci 24-1058-2004.pdf830 KB