PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Thomas A. Stalnaker AU - Gwendolyn G. Calhoon AU - Masaaki Ogawa AU - Matthew R. Roesch AU - Geoffrey Schoenbaum TI - Reward Prediction Error Signaling in Posterior Dorsomedial Striatum Is Action Specific AID - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0832-12.2012 DP - 2012 Jul 25 TA - The Journal of Neuroscience PG - 10296--10305 VI - 32 IP - 30 4099 - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/32/30/10296.short 4100 - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/32/30/10296.full SO - J. Neurosci.2012 Jul 25; 32 AB - Neural correlates of reward prediction errors (RPEs) have been found in dorsal striatum. Such signals may be important for updating associative action representations within striatum. In order that the appropriate representations can be updated, it might be important for the RPE signal to be specific for the action that led to that error. However, RPEs signaled by midbrain dopamine neurons, which project heavily to striatum, are not action-specific. Here we tested whether RPE-like activity in dorsal striatum is action-specific; we recorded single-unit activity in posterior dorsomedial and dorsolateral striatum as rats performed a task in which the reward predictions associated with two different actions were repeatedly violated, thereby eliciting RPEs. We separately analyzed fast firing neurons (FFNs) and phasically firing neurons (total n = 1076). Only among FFNs recorded in posterior dorsomedial striatum did we find a population with RPE-like characteristics (19 of all 196 FFNs, 10%). This population showed a phasic increase in activity during unexpected rewards, a phasic decrease in activity during unexpected omission of rewards, and a phasic increase in activity during cues when they predicted high-value reward. However, unlike a classical RPE signal, this signal was linked to the action that elicited the prediction error, in that neurons tended to signal RPEs only after their anti-preferred action. This action-specific RPE-like signal could provide a mechanism for updating specific associative action representations in posterior dorsomedial striatum.