PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Amanda C. Burton AU - Gregory B. Bissonette AU - Adam C. Zhao AU - Pooja K. Patel AU - Matthew R. Roesch TI - Prior cocaine self-administration increases response-outcome encoding that is divorced from actions selected in dorsal lateral striatum AID - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0897-17.2017 DP - 2017 Jul 10 TA - The Journal of Neuroscience PG - 0897-17 4099 - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/early/2017/07/10/JNEUROSCI.0897-17.2017.short 4100 - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/early/2017/07/10/JNEUROSCI.0897-17.2017.full AB - Dorsal lateral striatum (DLS) is a highly associative structure which encodes relationships between environmental stimuli, behavioral responses, and predicted outcomes. DLS is known to be disrupted after chronic drug abuse, however it remains unclear what neural signals in DLS are altered. Current theory suggests that drug use enhances stimuli-response processing at the expense of response-outcome encoding, but this has mostly been tested in simple behavioral tasks. Here, we ask what neural correlates in DLS are affected by previous cocaine exposure as rats perform a complex reward-guided decision-making task where predicted reward value was independently manipulated by changing the delay to or size of reward associated with a response direction across a series of trial blocks. After cocaine self-administration, rats exhibited stronger biases toward higher value reward and firing in DLS more strongly represented action-outcome contingencies independent from actions subsequently taken rather than outcomes predicted by selected actions (chosen-outcome contingencies) and associations between stimuli and actions (stimulus-response contingencies). These results suggest that cocaine self-administration strengthens action-outcome encoding in rats (as opposed to chosen-outcome or stimulus-response encoding), which abnormally biases behavior toward valued reward when there is a choice between two options during reward-guided decision-making.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTCurrent theories suggest that impaired decision-making observed in individuals that chronically abuse drugs reflects a decrease in goal-directed behaviors and an increase in habitual behaviors governed by neural representations of response-outcome and stimulus-response associations, respectively. We examined the impact that prior cocaine self-administration had on firing in dorsal lateral striatum (DLS), a brain area known to be involved in habit formation and affected by drugs of abuse, during performance of a complex reward-guided decision-making task. Surprisingly, we found that previous cocaine exposure enhanced response-outcome associations in DLS. This suggests that there may be more complex consequences of drug abuse than current theories have explored, especially when examining brain and behavior in the context of a complex two-choice decision-making task.