Abstract

It has been proposed that cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical circuits that incorporate the prefrontal cortex and corpus striatum regulate interval timing behaviour. In the present experiment regional Fos expression was compared between rats trained under an immediate timing schedule, the free-operant psychophysical procedure (FOPP), which entails temporally regulated switching between two operanda, and a yoked variable-interval (VI) schedule matched to the timing task for food deprivation level, reinforcement rate and overall response rate. The density of Fos-positive neurones (countsmm−2) in the orbital prefrontal cortex (OPFC) and the shell of the nucleus accumbens (AcbS) was greater in rats exposed to the FOPP than in rats exposed to the VI schedule, suggesting a greater activation of these areas during the performance of the former task. The enhancement of Fos expression in the OPFC is consistent with previous findings with both immediate and retrospective timing schedules. Enhanced Fos expression in the AcbS was previously found in retrospective timing schedules based on conditional discrimination tasks, but not in a single-operandum immediate timing schedule, the fixed-interval peak procedure. It is suggested that the ventral striatum may be engaged during performance on timing schedules that entail operant choice, irrespective of whether they belong to the immediate or retrospective categories.

Highlights

  • It has been proposed that cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical circuits that incorporate the prefrontal cortex and corpus striatum regulate interval timing behaviour

  • It was found that rats trained under these schedules showed enhanced Fos expression in the prefrontal cortex and ventral striatum, compared to rats trained under non-temporal discriminaton tasks, indicating that these structures were activated during performance on the timing schedules

  • Overall response rate was somewhat higher in the free-operant psychophysical procedure (FOPP) group than in the yoked VI group; this difference was not statistically significant [t(22) = 0.8, N.S.]

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Summary

Introduction

It has been proposed that cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical circuits that incorporate the prefrontal cortex and corpus striatum regulate interval timing behaviour. Recent findings by Valencia-Torres et al [11] suggest that the ventral striatum (nucleus accumbens) may play a significant role in the performance of rats on some timing tasks L. Valencia-Torres et al / Behavioural Brain Research 235 (2012) 273–279 examined Fos expression, a marker of neuronal activation, in the prefrontal cortex and corpus striatum following performance on retrospective timing schedules (the interval bisection task [12,13] and another discrete-trials psychophysical procedure [14]). The same authors [15] found no significant enhancement of Fos expression in the ventral striatum following performance on an immediate timing schedule, the fixed-interval peak procedure [12,16]

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