Neuron
Volume 79, Issue 5, 4 September 2013, Pages 1001-1010
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Article
Distinct Basal Ganglia Circuits Controlling Behaviors Guided by Flexible and Stable Values

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2013.06.044Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Neurons in the primate caudate nucleus encode reward values of visual objects

  • Flexible and stable values are encoded in the caudate head and tail, respectively

  • Inactivation of caudate head disrupts gaze choice guided solely by flexible values

  • Inactivation of caudate tail disrupts gaze choice guided solely by stable values

Summary

Choosing valuable objects is critical for survival, but their values may change flexibly or remain stable. Therefore, animals should be able to update the object values flexibly by recent experiences and retain them stably by long-term experiences. However, it is unclear how the brain encodes the two conflicting forms of values and controls behavior accordingly. We found that distinct circuits of the primate caudate nucleus control behavior selectively in the flexible and stable value conditions. Single caudate neurons encoded the values of visual objects in a regionally distinct manner: flexible value coding in the caudate head and stable value coding in the caudate tail. Monkeys adapted in both conditions by looking at objects with higher values. Importantly, inactivation of each caudate subregion disrupted the high-low value discrimination selectively in the flexible or stable context. This parallel complementary mechanism enables animals to choose valuable objects in both flexible and stable conditions.

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