Predictive reward signal
of dopamine neurons
by
chultz W
Institute of Physiology and Program in Neuroscience,
University of Fribourg,
CH-1700 Fribourg, Switzerland.
J Neurophysiol 1998 Jul; 80(1):1-27
ABSTRACT
The effects of lesions, receptor blocking, electrical self-stimulation, and
drugs of abuse suggest that midbrain dopamine systems are involved in processing
reward information and learning approach behavior. Most dopamine neurons show
phasic activations after primary liquid and food rewards and conditioned,
reward-predicting visual and auditory stimuli. They show biphasic,
activation-depression responses after stimuli that resemble reward-predicting
stimuli or are novel or particularly salient. However, only few phasic
activations follow aversive stimuli. Thus dopamine neurons label environmental
stimuli with appetitive value, predict and detect rewards and signal alerting
and motivating events. By failing to discriminate between different rewards,
dopamine neurons appear to emit an alerting message about the surprising
presence or absence of rewards. All responses to rewards and reward-predicting
stimuli depend on event predictability. Dopamine neurons are activated by
rewarding events that are better than predicted, remain uninfluenced by events
that are as good as predicted, and are depressed by events that are worse than
predicted. By signaling rewards according to a prediction error, dopamine
responses have the formal characteristics of a teaching signal postulated by
reinforcement learning theories. Dopamine responses transfer during learning
from primary rewards to reward-predicting stimuli. This may contribute to
neuronal mechanisms underlying the retrograde action of rewards, one of the main
puzzles in reinforcement learning. The impulse response releases a short pulse
of dopamine onto many dendrites, thus broadcasting a rather global reinforcement
signal to postsynaptic neurons. This signal may improve approach behavior by
providing advance reward information before the behavior occurs, and may
contribute to learning by modifying synaptic transmission. The dopamine reward
signal is supplemented by activity in neurons in striatum, frontal cortex, and
amygdala, which process specific reward information but do not emit a global
reward prediction error signal. A cooperation between the different reward
signals may assure the use of specific rewards for selectively reinforcing
behaviors. Among the other projection systems, noradrenaline neurons
predominantly serve attentional mechanisms and nucleus basalis neurons code
rewards heterogeneously. Cerebellar climbing fibers signal errors in motor
performance or errors in the prediction of aversive events to cerebellar
Purkinje cells. Most deficits following dopamine-depleting lesions are not
easily explained by a defective reward signal but may reflect the absence of a
general enabling function of tonic levels of extracellular dopamine. Thus
dopamine systems may have two functions, the phasic transmission of reward
information and the tonic enabling of postsynaptic neurons.
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