Cienciaes.com: The evaluative brain | Science Podcast

by time news

2017-01-22 11:48:42

The ability to predict what is more or less likely to happen in the future and make the most appropriate decisions has been the subject of intense research for decades. In the 1990s, a research group led by Dr. Wolfram Schultz confirmed that the primate midbrain responded in a rather surprising way to the rewards given to animals after performing certain tasks.

If the monkeys under study were rewarded in a way superior to what they expected, the neurons that, to communicate, manufacture and use the neurotransmitter dopamine (ND) were activated with intensity. If the reward was similar to that expected by the animals, these neurons maintained an activity in the normal range. On the other hand, if the reward was less than expected, the neurons decreased their activation below normal.

Subsequently, another type of neuron (GABA) was identified, also located in the midbrain, which also seemed to be involved in this task.

Now, researchers at the University of Cambridge have studied whether or not ND neurons can also assess the probability that a certain reward will occur. The results, carried out with monkeys, show that ND neurons are also involved in learning the probability of receiving or not receiving a reward. When the monkeys were forced to choose between two images to obtain the reward, the activity of the ND neurons reflected the difference between the probabilities of both stimuli to obtain the desired reward.

Many people decide every day what to do to maximize the benefits of their investments, to get a job, to sell more products… All of our economic activity, basically, could depend on the proper functioning of our ND neurons. Something to reflect on in days of crisis. After all, we too are primates.

More information on Jorge Laborda’s blog: The evaluative brain

Referencias: Dopamine neurons learn relative chosen value from probabilistic rewards Lak et al. eLife 2016;5:e18044. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.18044. (2). Neir Eshel (2016) Trial and error. Science. 2 DECEMBER 2016 • VOL 354 ISSUE 6316,pp. 1108.

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