4.7 Article

A Role for Dopamine in Temporal Decision Making and Reward Maximization in Parkinsonism

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 47, Pages 12294-12304

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3116-08.2008

Keywords

Parkinson's disease; basal ganglia; dopamine; reinforcement learning; computational model; reward

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute on Mental Health [R01 MH080066-01]

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Converging evidence implicates striatal dopamine (DA) in reinforcement learning, such that DA increases enhance Go learning to pursue actions with rewarding outcomes, whereas DA decreases enhance NoGo learning to avoid non-rewarding actions. Here we test whether these effects apply to the response time domain. We employ a novel paradigm which requires the adjustment of response times to a single response. Reward probability varies as a function of response time, whereas reward magnitude changes in the opposite direction. In the control condition, these factors exactly cancel, such that the expected value across time is constant (CEV). In two other conditions, expected value increases (IEV) or decreases (DEV), such that reward maximization requires either speeding up (Go learning) or slowing down (NoGo learning) relative to the CEV condition. We tested patients with Parkinson's disease (depleted striatal DA levels) on and off dopaminergic medication, compared with age-matched controls. While medicated, patients were better at speeding up in the DEV relative to CEV conditions. Conversely, nonmedicated patients were better at slowing down to maximize reward in the IEV condition. These effects of DA manipulation on cumulative Go/NoGo response time adaptation were captured with our a priori computational model of the basal ganglia, previously applied only to forced-choice tasks. There were also robust trial-to-trial changes in response time, but these single trial adaptations were not affected by disease or medication and are posited to rely on extrastriatal, possibly prefrontal, structures.

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