4.8 Article

Primate ventral striatum maintains neural representations of the value of previously rewarded objects for habitual seeking

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22335-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Brain Research Program [NRF-2017M3C7A1031333]
  2. Neurological Disorder Research Program [NRF-2020M3E5D9079908]
  3. National Research Foundation (NRF) of Korea [NRF-2019R1A2C2005213, NRF-2020R1A2C2007770]
  4. [IBS-R015-D1]

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The ventral striatum is involved in updating reward values for habit learning, while also stably maintaining the value memory for previously rewarded objects. Days after learning, the ventral striatum continues to show increased responses to these objects, indicating a long-term retention of high-valued object memory.
The ventral striatum (VS) is considered a key region that flexibly updates recent changes in reward values for habit learning. However, this update process may not serve to maintain learned habitual behaviors, which are insensitive to value changes. Here, using fMRI in humans and single-unit electrophysiology in macaque monkeys we report another role of the primate VS: that the value memory subserving habitual seeking is stably maintained in the VS. Days after object-value associative learning, human and monkey VS continue to show increased responses to previously rewarded objects, even when no immediate reward outcomes are expected. The similarity of neural response patterns to each rewarded object increases after learning among participants who display habitual seeking. Our data show that long-term memory of high-valued objects is retained as a single representation in the VS and may be utilized to evaluate visual stimuli automatically to guide habitual behavior. Ventral striatum is known to be involved in the value update for habit learning. Here, the authors report neural and behavioural correlates for the long-term maintenance of value memory for previously rewarded objects in the ventral striatum of humans and monkeys.

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