Abstract

The ventral pallidum (VP) is anatomically poised to contribute to threat behavior. Recent studies report a VP population that scales firing increases to reward but decreases firing to aversive cues. Here, we tested whether firing decreases in VP neurons serve as a neural signal for relative threat. Single-unit activity was recorded while male rats discriminated cues predicting unique foot shock probabilities. Rats’ behavior and VP single-unit firing discriminated danger, uncertainty, and safety cues. Two populations of VP neurons dynamically signaled relative threat, decreasing firing according to foot shock probability during early cue presentation, but disproportionately decreasing firing to uncertain threat as foot shock drew near. One relative threat population increased firing to reward, consistent with a bi-directional signal for general value. The second population was unresponsive to reward, revealing a specific signal for relative threat. The results reinforce anatomy to reveal the VP as a neural source of a dynamic, relative threat signal.

Highlights

  • The ventral pallidum (VP) is anatomically poised to contribute to threat behavior

  • The VP contributes to the formation of a conditioned taste aversion[21,22,39,40,41] and VP neurons can acquire responding to aversive cues[42]

  • VP neurons showing firing increases to a reward cue and decreases to an aversive cue have been observed in monkeys[44]

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Summary

Introduction

Recent studies report a VP population that scales firing increases to reward but decreases firing to aversive cues. One relative threat population increased firing to reward, consistent with a bi-directional signal for general value. VP neurons showing firing increases to a reward cue and decreases to an aversive cue have been observed in monkeys[44] Consistent across both studies, the VP contained a separate population that showed firing increases to both reward and aversive cues, indicative of salience signaling[19,44,45,46]. We recorded VP single-unit activity from male rats undergoing fear discrimination consisting of cues predicting unique foot shock probabilities: danger (p = 1.00), uncertainty (p = 0.25), and safety (p = 0.00). The behavior/ recording approach allowed us to reveal activity patterns reflecting relative threat, relative value spanning threat and reward through opposing changes in firing, as well as salience

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