Abstract

The lateral habenula (LHb) is a brain structure which represents negative motivational value. Neurons in the LHb are excited by unpleasant events such as reward omission and aversive stimuli, and transmit these signals to midbrain dopamine neurons which are involved in learning and motivation. However, it remains unclear whether these phasic changes in LHb neuronal activity actually influence animal behavior. To answer this question, we artificially activated the LHb by electrical stimulation while monkeys were performing a visually guided saccade task. In one block of trials, saccades to one fixed direction (e.g., right direction) were followed by electrical stimulation of the LHb while saccades to the other direction (e.g., left direction) were not. The direction-stimulation contingency was reversed in the next block. We found that the post-saccadic stimulation of the LHb increased the latencies of saccades in subsequent trials. Notably, the increase of the latency occurred gradually as the saccade was repeatedly followed by the stimulation, suggesting that the effect of the post-saccadic stimulation was accumulated across trials. LHb stimulation starting before saccades, on the other hand, had no effect on saccade latency. Together with previous studies showing LHb activation by reward omission and aversive stimuli, the present stimulation experiment suggests that LHb activity contributes to learning to suppress actions which lead to unpleasant events.

Highlights

  • The lateral habenula (LHb) is a structure which belongs to the habenular complex in the epithalamus

  • We compared saccade latency between the stimulation condition and the no-stimulation condition for each saccade direction

  • We previously found that LHb neurons are activated phasically by unpleasant events including reward omission [18,19]

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Summary

Introduction

The lateral habenula (LHb) is a structure which belongs to the habenular complex in the epithalamus. Since theoretical and experimental studies have suggested the involvement of dopamine neurons in rewardseeking and punishment-avoidance learning [20,21,22,23,24], it is possible that the LHb signals contribute to the learning by influencing dopamine neuron activity. It remains unclear whether these phasic LHb signals influence animal behaviors, and if so, how

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