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The Journal of Neuroscience, October 1, 2001, 21(19):7770-7780
The Role of the Primate Amygdala in Conditioned Reinforcement
John A.
Parkinson1,
Harriet S.
Crofts2,
Mike
McGuigan1,
Davorka L.
Tomic1,
Barry J.
Everitt2, and
Angela C.
Roberts1
Departments of 1 Anatomy and 2 Experimental
Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3DY, United
Kingdom
Conditioned reinforcement refers to the capacity of a conditioned
stimulus to support instrumental behavior by acquiring affective properties of the primary reinforcer with which it is associated. Conditioned reinforcers maintain behavior over protracted periods of
time in the absence of, and potentially in conflict with, primary reinforcers and as such may play a fundamental role in complex social
behavior. A relatively large body of evidence supports the view that
the amygdala (and in particular the basolateral area) contributes to
conditioned reinforcement by maintaining a representation of the
affective value of conditioned stimuli. However, a recent study in
primates (Malkova et al., 1997), using a second-order visual
discrimination task, suggests that the amygdala is not critical for the
conditioned reinforcement process.
In the present study, excitotoxic lesions of the amygdala in a new
world primate, the common marmoset, resulted in a progressive impairment in responding under a second-order schedule of food reinforcement. In addition, the responding of amygdala-lesioned animals
was insensitive to the omission of the conditioned reinforcer, unlike
that of control animals, for which responding was markedly reduced. In contrast, lesioned animals were unimpaired when
responding on a progression of fixed-ratio schedules of primary
reinforcement. These data confirm that the amygdala is critical for the
conditioned reinforcement process in primates, and taken together with
other recent work in monkeys, these results suggest that the
contribution of the amygdala is to provide the affective value of
specific reinforcers as accessed by associated conditioned stimuli.
Key words:
appetitive conditioning; marmoset; excitotoxic; goal-directed behavior; incentive value; second-order
schedule
Copyright © 2001 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/01/21197770-11$05.00/0
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