Reward and MOtivation Flashcards

1
Q

Why do act the way we do?

A

Behaviorism: we only know our actions, we will never fully understand “why”
All boils down to the answer: “because my brain told me to”
We make decisions based on prediction, reward, outcome
…and what motivates us

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2
Q

3 aspects underlying reward-related behaviors

A
Learning and memory
-- Based on sensory and emotional experience
Motivation (wanting)
-- Based on internal states
Pleasure (liking)
-- Based on experiencing a reward
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3
Q

Hebbian learning:

A

“Neurons that fire together, wire together”

When an axon of cell A is near enough to excite a cell B and repeatedly or persistently takes part in firing it, some growth process or metabolic change takes place in one or both cells such that A’s efficiency, as one of the cells firing B, is increased.

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4
Q

The aplysia told us that Hebb was right

A

Shock the tail plus the light skin touch  major response. Remove the tail stimulus– > still a strong response.

Multiple shocks lead to long-term potentiation

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5
Q

what is the neural correlate to Hebbian learning ?

A

long-term potentiation

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6
Q

What 2 things contribute to learning and memory?

A

Both Long-term Potentiation (LTP) and Depression (LTD) Contribute to Learning and Memory

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7
Q

Physical Determinants of Plasticity:

A

Increasing dendritic spines to increase synapses

On every spine there are a ton of different receptors that can be expressed. These spines can form in a matter of hours. The more potentiation– the more spines. This increases the volume of a part of the hippocampus

Hippocampal Neurogenesis

The other place where adult neurogenesis can happen is the Sub Granular Zone of the hippocampus. BrdU (yellow) says a neuron has undergone mitosis. SCX is a young neuron. Green NeuN is an adult neuron.

Stress/ cortisol inhibits this process!

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8
Q

Circuits for Motor Learning in the Cerebellum interact with

A

Hippocampal Circuits for Navigation

Certain cells in the Hippocampus code for “Place” by firing whenever they are in a particular area or spatial context

Long-Term Depression Between the Parallel Fibers and Purkinje Cells are thought to Underlie Motor Learning in the Cerebellum

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9
Q

The basic cerebellar circuitry is defined by

A

GABA and glutamate

The circuit allows for the comparison of ongoing movement and sensory feedback derived from it

The cerebellum measures expectation vs. outcome

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10
Q

LTD Underlies Extinction of Memories, Controlled by 3-Structure Circuit

A

Limbic cortex integrates hippocampal and amygdalar inputs

Hippocampus contributes context info to other associations

Amygdala acquires emotion-laden memories, especially associated with fear

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11
Q

The Amygdala has Bi-Directional Connections with Brainstem, Limbic and Cortical Structures

A

2 Pathways :

Stria Terminalis

Amygdalofugal Tract

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12
Q

Amygdala is collection of nuclei

A

2 pathways

1 involves basolateral nucleus to central nucleus indirect

  • This is slow response
  • Fear association that isn’t immediate

1 involves visceral responses, direct

  • This is a fast response
  • Think “what happens when I see a snake”
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13
Q

Many types of memory, many circuits responsible

A

Long term memory

Declarative: episodic, semantic –> medial temoral lobe, diencephalon

nondeclarative memory: procedural memory, skills habits –> basal ganglia

priming–> neocortex

simple classical conditioning–> amygdala, cerebellum

habituation, sensitization–> reflex pathways

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14
Q

Learning and Memory depend on sensory experience

A

Nearly all cortical areas feed into the basal ganglia circuitry, connect many sensory experiences with each other
Multimodal association cortices code for memory recruited in reward-based behaviors:
–Insula
–Orbitofrontal cortex

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15
Q

Dopamine level fluctuations, both tonic and phasic, are among the most potent modulators of cue-triggered temptation

Dopamine in the VTA is released when:

A

Reward is unexpected
Reward is cued

*Dopamine release is inhibited when expected reward is not present:

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16
Q

phases of motivated behavior

A
instrumental phase (accumbens, DA Dependent)
approach, avoidance behaviors

Consummatory phase (accumbens, DA independent) Goal stimuli: food, water, sex, drugs, predators, pain, discomfort

17
Q

The basal ganglia limbic circuit in reward-related behavior uses VTA dopamine

A

VTA feeds DA to nucleus ccumbens (push) (Ventral striatum)

–> ventral pallidum–> MD thalamus –> hippocampus, amygdala, OFC, Insula, Cingulate –> back to nucleus accumbens

18
Q

Hypothalamic inputs to the basal ganglia limbic circuit

A

hypothalamus increases the want by communicating with

  • hippocamp/ amygdala/ OFC/ insula/ cingulate,
  • nucles accumens
  • Ventral Tegmental Area
19
Q

When you don’t get the expected reward

A

Habenula comes in and inhibits ventral tegmental area -> not so motivated anymore.

20
Q

Drugs of abuse alter physical properties of dendrites (spines) in nucleus accumbens

A

Cocaine and amphetamines make huge amounts of dendritic spines

21
Q

Opioid binding in certain structures mediates feelings of pleasure

A

Opioids bind all over the CNS, only some structures elicit pleasure
“Liking” is strongly evoked when opioids in:
- Cingulate
- OFC
- Nucleus accumbens/ventral striatum
- Parabrachial nucleus

22
Q

The segmented pathway approach: Functionally distinct loops of basal ganglia also activated in parallel to limbic loop:

A
Cognitive/prefrontal loop [Executive Function]
DLPFC
Caudate/Putamen
GPi
MD thal, VA/VL thal
Accessory Motor loop                  [Coordinated actions]
Frontal lobe motor ctx
Caudate/Putamen
Gpi
VA/VL thal