keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38562896/the-effect-of-corticosterone-on-the-acquisition-of-pavlovian-conditioned-approach-behavior-is-dependent-on-sex-and-vendor
#1
Alexandra Turfe, Sara R Westbrook, Sofia A Lopez, Stephen E Chang, Shelly B Flagel
UNLABELLED: Cues in the environment become predictors of biologically relevant stimuli, such as food, through associative learning. These cues can not only act as predictors but can also be attributed with incentive motivational value and gain control over behavior. When a cue is imbued with incentive salience, it attains the ability to elicit maladaptive behaviors characteristic of psychopathology. We can capture the propensity to attribute incentive salience to a reward cue in rats using a Pavlovian conditioned approach paradigm, in which the presentation of a discrete lever-cue is followed by the delivery of a food reward...
March 20, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38559127/genome-wide-association-study-in-outbred-heterogeneous-stock-rats-identifies-multiple-loci-for-the-incentive-salience-of-reward-cues
#2
Christopher P King, Apurva S Chitre, Joel D Leal-GutiƩrrez, Jordan A Tripi, Alesa R Hughson, Aidan P Horvath, Alexander C Lamparelli, Anthony George, Connor Martin, Celine L St Pierre, Hannah V Bimschleger, Jianjun Gao, Riyan Cheng, Khai-Minh Nguyen, Katie L Holl, Oksana Polesskaya, Keita Ishiwari, Hao Chen, Leah C Solberg Woods, Abraham A Palmer, Terry E Robinson, Shelly B Flagel, Paul J Meyer
Addiction vulnerability is associated with the tendency to attribute incentive salience to reward predictive cues; both addiction and the attribution of incentive salience are influenced by environmental and genetic factors. To characterize the genetic contributions to incentive salience attribution, we performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in a cohort of 1,645 genetically diverse heterogeneous stock (HS) rats. We tested HS rats in a Pavlovian conditioned approach task, in which we characterized the individual responses to food-associated stimuli ("cues")...
March 14, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38527649/variation-in-the-effectiveness-of-reinforcement-and-nonreinforcement-in-generating-different-conditioned-behaviors
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victor Navarro, Dominic M Dwyer, Robert C Honey
Rat autoshaping procedures generate two readily measurable conditioned responses: During lever presentations that have previously signaled food, rats approach the food well (called goal-tracking) and interact with the lever itself (called sign-tracking). We investigated how reinforced and nonreinforced trials affect the overall and temporal distributions of these two responses across 10-second lever presentations. In two experiments, reinforced trials generated more goal-tracking than sign-tracking, and nonreinforced trials resulted in a larger reduction in goal-tracking than sign-tracking...
March 23, 2024: Neurobiology of Learning and Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38479081/sign-tracking-to-non-drug-reward-is-related-to-severity-of-alcohol-use-problems-in-a-sample-of-individuals-seeking-treatment
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Poppy Watson, Katrina Prior, Nicole Ridley, Lauren Monds, Victoria Manning, Reinout W Wiers, Mike E Le Pelley
BACKGROUND: A prominent neuroscientific theory of drug addiction is the incentive sensitization model. Individual differences in the tendency to ascribe motivational salience to cues that predict reward, and involuntary "sign-tracking" (orientation towards) such cues have been identified as potentially important in understanding vulnerability to addiction and relapse. However, to date this behaviour has not been assessed in a treatment-seeking clinical population, who typically represent those most susceptible to alcohol-related harms and episodes of relapse...
March 9, 2024: Addictive Behaviors
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38447709/acute-mk-801-increases-measures-of-both-sign-tracking-and-goal-tracking-in-male-sprague-dawley-rats
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John Michael Holden, Amanda Barbaro, Kiya Azure, Megan Arth
Sign-tracking is a Pavlovian conditioned approach behavior thought to be important in understanding cue-driven relapse to drug use, and strategies for reducing sign-tracking may have some benefit in preventing relapse. A previous study successfully employed the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 in preventing the development of sign-tracking (but not goal-tracking) in a conditioned approach task. In this study, we focused on whether MK-801 would have similar effects on previously established sign-tracking behavior...
March 4, 2024: Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38383282/express-effects-of-outcome-revaluation-on-attentional-prioritisation-of-reward-related-stimuli
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jenny Le, Poppy Watson, Mike Le Pelley
Stimuli associated with rewards can acquire the ability to capture our attention independently of our goals and intentions. Here, we examined whether attentional prioritisation of reward-related cues is sensitive to changes in the value of the reward itself. To this end, we incorporated an instructed outcome devaluation (Experiment 1a), 'super-valuation' (Experiment 1b), or value switch (Experiment 2) into a visual search task, using eye-tracking to examine attentional prioritisation of stimuli signalling high- and low-value rewards...
February 21, 2024: Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology: QJEP
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38298793/neurobehavioral-precursors-of-compulsive-cocaine-seeking-in-dual-frontostriatal-circuits
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jolyon A Jones, Aude Belin-Rauscent, Bianca Jupp, Maxime Fouyssac, Stephen J Sawiak, Katharina Zuhlsdorff, Peter Zhukovsky, Lara Hebdon, Clara Velazquez Sanchez, Trevor W Robbins, Barry J Everitt, David Belin, Jeffrey W Dalley
BACKGROUND: Only some individuals who use drugs recreationally eventually develop a substance use disorder, characterized in part by the rigid engagement in drug foraging behavior (drug seeking), which is often maintained in the face of adverse consequences (i.e., is compulsive). The neurobehavioral determinants of this individual vulnerability have not been fully elucidated. METHODS: Using a prospective longitudinal study involving 39 male rats, we combined multidimensional characterization of behavioral traits of vulnerability to stimulant use disorder (impulsivity and stickiness) and resilience (sign tracking and sensation seeking/locomotor reactivity to novelty) with magnetic resonance imaging to identify the structural and functional brain correlates of the later emergence of compulsive drug seeking in drug-naïve subjects...
January 2024: Biol Psychiatry Glob Open Sci
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38220058/risk-promoting-effects-of-reward-paired-cues-in-human-sign-and-goal-trackers
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mariya V Cherkasova, Luke Clark, Jason J S Barton, A Jon Stoessl, Catharine A Winstanley
Animal research suggests trait-like individual variation in the degree of incentive salience attribution to reward-predictive cues, defined phenotypically as sign-tracking (high) and goal-tracking (low incentive salience attribution). While these phenotypes have been linked to addiction features in rodents, their translational validity is less clear. Here, we examined whether sign- and goal-tracking in healthy human volunteers modulates the effects of reward-paired cues on decision making. Sign-tracking was measured in a Pavlovian conditioning paradigm as the amount of eye gaze fixation on the reward-predictive cue versus the location of impending reward delivery...
January 12, 2024: Behavioural Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38184207/sign-tracking-and-goal-tracking-in-humans-utilising-eye-tracking-in-clinical-and-non-clinical-populations
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Larisa-Maria Dinu, Alexandra-Livia Georgescu, Samriddhi N Singh, Nicola C Byrom, Paul G Overton, Bryan F Singer, Eleanor J Dommett
BACKGROUND: In Pavlovian conditioning, learned behavior varies according to the perceived value of environmental cues. For goal-trackers (GT), the cue merely predicts a reward, whilst for sign-trackers (ST), the cue holds incentive value. The sign-tracking/goal-tracking model is well-validated in animals, but translational work is lacking. Despite the model's relevance to several conditions, including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), we are unaware of any studies that have examined the model in clinical populations...
January 4, 2024: Behavioural Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38053922/propensity-for-risky-choices-despite-lower-cue-reactivity-in-adolescent-rats
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sandford Zeng, Elin F B McLaughlin, Aishwarya Ramesh, Sara E Morrison
Adolescence is a time of heightened risk-taking across species. Salient audiovisual cues associated with rewards are a common feature of gambling environments and have been connected to increased risky decision-making. We have previously shown that, in adult male rats, sign tracking - a behavioral measure of cue reactivity - predicts an individual's propensity for suboptimal risky choices in a rodent gambling task (rGT) with win-paired cues. However, adolescents perform less sign tracking than adult animals, suggesting that they are less cue-reactive than adults in some circumstances...
2023: Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37984521/role-of-nucleus-accumbens-d1-type-medium-spiny-neurons-in-the-expression-and-extinction-of-sign-tracking
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rifka C Derman, Elizabeth C Bryda, Carrie R Ferrario
While sign-tracking, also known as autoshaping, has been studied for many decades, only recently has the tendency to show sign-tracking behavior been linked to the development and persistence of addiction. Sign-tracking is dependent upon dopamine activity in the Nucleus Accumbens (NAc). The NAc is comprised predominantly of medium spiny projection neurons (MSN) that can be differentiated by their D1-like or D2-like dopamine receptor expression. Here we determined how reducing activity of D1-type MSNs in the NAc affects the expression and extinction of sign-tracking...
November 18, 2023: Behavioural Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37709540/inhibition-of-dopamine-neurons-prevents-incentive-value-encoding-of-a-reward-cue-with-revelations-from-deep-phenotyping
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amanda G Iglesias, Alvin S Chiu, Jason Wong, Paolo Campus, Fei Li, Zitong Nemo Liu, Jasmine K Bhatti, Shiv A Patel, Karl Deisseroth, Huda Akil, Christian R Burgess, Shelly B Flagel
The survival of an organism is dependent on their ability to respond to cues in the environment. Such cues can attain control over behavior as a function of the value ascribed to them. Some individuals have an inherent tendency to attribute reward-paired cues with incentive motivational value, or incentive salience. For these individuals, termed sign-trackers, a discrete cue that precedes reward delivery becomes attractive and desirable in its own right. Prior work suggests that the behavior of sign-trackers is dopamine-dependent, and cue-elicited dopamine in the nucleus accumbens is believed to encode the incentive value of reward cues...
September 13, 2023: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37708886/prediction-error-in-models-of-adaptive-behavior
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victor M Navarro, Dominic M Dwyer, Robert C Honey
Pavlovian conditioning is evident in every species in which it has been assessed, and there is a consensus about its interpretation across behavioral,1 , 2 brain,3 , 4 , 5 , 6 and computational analyses7 , 8 , 9 , 10 , 11 : conditioned behavior reflects the formation of a directional associative link from the memory of one stimulus (e.g., a visual stimulus) to another (e.g., food), with learning stopping when there is no error between the prediction generated by the visual stimulus and what happens next (e...
September 6, 2023: Current Biology: CB
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37706228/theory-of-reinforcement-schedules
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter R Killeen
The three principles of reinforcement are (1) events such as incentives and reinforcers increase the activity of an organism; (2) that activity is bounded by competition from other responses; and (3) animals approach incentives and their signs, guided by their temporal and physical conditions, together called the "contingencies of reinforcement." Mathematical models of each of these principles comprised mathematical principles of reinforcement (MPR; Killeen, 1994). Over the ensuing decades, MPR was extended to new experimental contexts...
September 14, 2023: Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37683812/-the-role-of-sex-on-sign-tracking-acquisition-and-outcome-devaluation-sensitivity-in-long-evans-rats
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth Bien, Kyle Smith
Cues that predict rewards can trigger reward-seeking behaviors but also can, in some cases, become targets of motivation themselves. One behavioral phenomenon that captures this idea is sign-tracking in which animals, including humans, interact with reward-predictive cues even though it is not necessary to do so. Sign-tracking in rats has been studied in the domain of motivation and in how motivated behaviors can or cannot become excessive and habit-like over time. Many prior studies look at sign-tracking examine this behavior in male subjects, but there are few papers that look at this behavior in female subjects...
September 6, 2023: Behavioural Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37643864/excitatory-and-inhibitory-signaling-in-the-nucleus-accumbens-encode-different-aspects-of-a-pavlovian-cue-in-sign-tracking-and-goal-tracking-rats
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kyle Duffer, Zachary S Gillis, Sara E Morrison
When a Pavlovian cue is presented separately from its associated reward, some animals will acquire a sign tracking (ST) response, approach and/or interaction with the cue, while others will acquire a goal tracking response, approach to the site of reward. We have previously shown that cue-evoked excitations in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) encode the vigor of both behaviors; in contrast, reward-related responses diverge over the course of training, possibly reflecting neurochemical differences between sign tracker and goal tracker individuals...
August 28, 2023: ENeuro
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37639232/what-enables-distraction-to-reduce-delay-discounting-for-pigeons-columba-livia
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peyton M Mueller, Daniel N Peng, Thomas R Zentall
In a successive delay-discounting task, a small reward can be obtained immediately but a larger reward can be obtained if one waits. There is evidence that the larger reward can be obtained more easily if one is "distracted" from obtaining the small reward. It is proposed here that a distractor stimulus may function as a Pavlovian conditioned stimulus (sign tracking) because orienting to it may be directly associated with the larger reinforcer. In the present study with pigeons, we examined two successive procedures: (a) a peck to a red light resulted in one pellet of food, and waiting for the red light to turn off resulted in five pellets (Red-Only)...
August 2023: Journal of Comparative Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37591961/nucleus-accumbens-core-acetylcholine-receptors-modulate-the-balance-of-flexible-and-inflexible-cue-directed-motivation
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erica S Townsend, Kenneth A Amaya, Elizabeth B Smedley, Kyle S Smith
Sign-tracking is a conditioned response where animals interact with reward-predictive cues due to the cues having motivational value, or incentive salience. The nucleus accumbens core (NAc) has been implicated in mediating the sign-tracking response. Additionally, acetylcholine (ACh) transmission throughout the striatum has been attributed to both incentive motivation and behavioral flexibility. Here, we demonstrate a role for NAc ACh receptors in the flexibility of sign-tracking. Sign-tracking animals were exposed to an omission contingency, in which vigorous sign-tracking was punished by reward omission...
August 17, 2023: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37406869/effects-of-inter-trial-interval-on-sign-tracking-and-conditioned-reinforcer-efficacy-in-female-rats
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Saba Mahmoudi, Sara Peck, Gregory J Madden
Previous nonhuman studies have reported that sign-tracking to a conditioned stimulus (CS) is increased when the intertrial interval (ITI) duration is increased. Separate studies indicate that individual differences in sign-tracking (vs. goal-tracking) at a fixed ITI (and CS duration) is predictive of the conditioned reinforcer efficacy of the CS. The present study evaluates, for the first time, if increasing the ITI increases rats' sign-tracking and the conditioned reinforcing efficacy of the CS. Forty-five female rats were randomly assigned to one of three groups that completed appetitive Pavlovian training with ITIs of 14, 24, or 96s...
July 3, 2023: Behavioural Processes
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37385521/effects-of-predictive-and-incentive-value-manipulation-on-sign-and-goal-tracking-behavior
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cristina E Maria-Rios, Christopher J Fitzpatrick, Francesca N Czesak, Jonathan D Morrow
When a neutral stimulus is repeatedly paired with an appetitive reward, two different types of conditioned approach responses may develop: a sign-tracking response directed toward the neutral cue, or a goal-tracking response directed toward the location of impending reward delivery. Sign-tracking responses have been postulated to result from attribution of incentive value to conditioned cues, while goal-tracking reflects the assignment of only predictive value to the cue. We therefore hypothesized that sign-tracking rats would be more sensitive to manipulations of incentive value, while goal-tracking rats would be more responsive to changes in the predictive value of the cue...
June 27, 2023: Neurobiology of Learning and Memory
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