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Reward and aversion encoding in the lateral habenula for innate and learned behaviours

Journal

TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41398-021-01774-0

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [31003A_175549]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [31003A_175549] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Individuals experience various positive and negative events in life, triggering adaptive behavioral responses. The epithalamic lateral habenula (LHb) is a crucial brain structure involved in encoding positive/negative stimuli and regulating innate and learned behaviors. LHb controls the monoaminergic systems and responds to unexpected and predictive cues.
Throughout life, individuals experience a vast array of positive and aversive events that trigger adaptive behavioural responses. These events are often unpredicted and engage actions that are likely anchored on innate behavioural programs expressed by each individual member of virtually all animal species. In a second step, environmental cues, that are initially neutral, acquire value through the association with external sensory stimuli, and become instrumental to predict upcoming positive or negative events. This process ultimately prompts learned goal-directed actions allowing the pursuit of rewarding experience or the avoidance of a danger. Both innate and learned behavioural programs are evolutionarily conserved and fundamental for survival. Among the brain structures participating in the encoding of positive/negative stimuli and contributing to innate and learned behaviours is the epithalamic lateral habenula (LHb). The LHb provides top-down control of monoaminergic systems, responds to unexpected appetitive/aversive stimuli as well as external cues that predict the upcoming rewards or punishments. Accordingly, the LHb controls a number of behaviours that are innate (originating from unpredicted stimuli), and learned (stemming from predictive cues). In this review, we will discuss the progresses that rodent's experimental work made in identifying how LHb activity governs these vital processes, and we will provide a view on how these findings integrate within a complex circuit connectivity.

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