Abstract

Making predictions about future rewards or punishments is fundamental to adaptive behavior. These processes are influenced by prior experience. For example, prior exposure to aversive stimuli or stressors changes behavioral responses to negative- and positive-value predictive cues. Here, we demonstrate a role for medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) neurons projecting to the paraventricular nucleus of the thalamus (PVT; mPFC→PVT) in this process. We found that a history of aversive stimuli negatively biased behavioral responses to motivationally relevant cues in mice and that this negative bias was associated with hyperactivity in mPFC→PVT neurons during exposure to those cues. Furthermore, artificially mimicking this hyperactive response with selective optogenetic excitation of the same pathway recapitulated the negative behavioral bias induced by aversive stimuli, whereas optogenetic inactivation of mPFC→PVT neurons prevented the development of the negative bias. Together, our results highlight how information flow within the mPFC→PVT circuit is critical for making predictions about motivationally-relevant outcomes as a function of prior experience.

Highlights

  • Effective decision making requires anticipating the outcomes associated with environmental stimuli

  • To assess the effect of aversive stimulus history on decisions about motivationally-significant outcomes, we developed a go/no-go discrimination task in head-fixed mice consisting of four phases: conditioning, probe test, reversal, and a second probe test (Figure 1A)

  • We examined the projection from medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) to paraventricular nucleus of the thalamus (PVT) in mice approaching or avoiding negative and positive valence-predictive stimuli

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Summary

Introduction

Effective decision making requires anticipating the outcomes associated with environmental stimuli. Many decisions are influenced by background emotional state Both positive and negative mood affect decision making (Deldin and Levin, 1986; Wright and Bower, 1992; Bechara et al, 2000; Hockey et al, 2000; Dolan, 2002; Harding et al, 2004). This background state can be driven by prior experience. How the balance between competing behaviors is weighed in the brain or how prior experience with an environment shifts this balance is still poorly understood

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