Periodic Reporting for period 1 - RegionalDopamine (Parsing dopamine's learning and motor functions)
Période du rapport: 2023-01-01 au 2024-12-31
Our project investigates how dopamine in the ventromedial striatum (VMS) contributes to both reward processing and movement. The goal is to clarify how dopamine supports behavior, by identifying whether its signals are driven by the reward itself or by the actions taken to obtain it or both.
By innovating design and complexity of such behavioral experiments, we show that dopamine signals in VMS are involved in both the anticipation of future rewards and movement. This increase in dopamine release is primarily driven by the movement towards the reward location. On the other hand, delivery of the reward itself nor the temporal proximity of reward delivery (i.e. how soon the reward is expected) did not affect the dopamine signal.
Together, our data suggests that VMS dopamine not only promotes the execution of actions, but continuously estimates spatial, but not temporal, distance to rewards. Importantly, after satisfying response requirements for rewards, the VMS dopamine signal appears to predominantly encode reward approach. Our findings have implications for understanding the role of dopamine in motivation and goal-directed action, and disorders where these processes may be disrupted.
The present work facilitates our understanding of dopamine's role in encoding reward prediction errors by showing the importance of behavioral context—specifically, movement toward a reward, and not just reward outcome.