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Causal evidence supporting the proposal that dopamine transients function as a temporal difference prediction error

Etienne JP Maes, View ORCID ProfileMelissa J Sharpe, Matthew P.H. Gardner, Chun Yun Chang, View ORCID ProfileGeoffrey Schoenbaum, View ORCID ProfileMihaela D. Iordanova
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/520965
Etienne JP Maes
1Department of Psychology/Centre for Studies in Behavioural Neurobiology, Concordia University, Montreal, H4B 1R6
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Melissa J Sharpe
2Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90065.
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Matthew P.H. Gardner
3NIDA Intramural Research Program, Baltimore, MD 21224
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Chun Yun Chang
3NIDA Intramural Research Program, Baltimore, MD 21224
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Geoffrey Schoenbaum
3NIDA Intramural Research Program, Baltimore, MD 21224
4Departments of Anatomy & Neurobiology and Psychiatry, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21201
5Solomon H. Snyder Department of Neuroscience, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21287
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  • For correspondence: geoffrey.schoenbaum@nih.gov mihaela.iordanova@concordia.ca
Mihaela D. Iordanova
1Department of Psychology/Centre for Studies in Behavioural Neurobiology, Concordia University, Montreal, H4B 1R6
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  • For correspondence: geoffrey.schoenbaum@nih.gov mihaela.iordanova@concordia.ca
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Abstract

Reward-evoked dopamine is well-established as a prediction error. However the central tenet of temporal difference accounts – that similar transients evoked by reward-predictive cues also function as errors – remains untested. To address this, we used two phenomena, second-order conditioning and blocking, in order to examine the role of dopamine in prediction error versus reward prediction. We show that optogenetically-shunting dopamine activity at the start of a reward-predicting cue prevents second-order conditioning without affecting blocking. These results support temporal difference accounts by providing causal evidence that cue-evoked dopamine transients function as prediction errors.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. This article is a US Government work. It is not subject to copyright under 17 USC 105 and is also made available for use under a CC0 license.
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Posted January 17, 2019.
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Causal evidence supporting the proposal that dopamine transients function as a temporal difference prediction error
Etienne JP Maes, Melissa J Sharpe, Matthew P.H. Gardner, Chun Yun Chang, Geoffrey Schoenbaum, Mihaela D. Iordanova
bioRxiv 520965; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/520965
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Causal evidence supporting the proposal that dopamine transients function as a temporal difference prediction error
Etienne JP Maes, Melissa J Sharpe, Matthew P.H. Gardner, Chun Yun Chang, Geoffrey Schoenbaum, Mihaela D. Iordanova
bioRxiv 520965; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/520965

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