Pavlov's rats? Rodents trained to link rewards to visual cues
Marshall Hussain Shuler |
In experiments on rats outfitted with tiny goggles, scientists
say they have learned that the brain's initial vision processing center not only
relays visual stimuli, but also can "learn" time intervals and create
specifically timed expectations of future rewards. The research, by a team at
the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, sheds new light on learning and memory-making, the investigators
say, and could help explain why people with Alzheimer's disease have trouble
remembering recent events. Results of the study, in the journal Neuron, suggest that connections within nerve
cell networks in the vision-processing center can be strengthened by the
neurochemical acetylcholine (ACh), which the brain is thought to secrete after
a reward is received. Only nerve cell networks recently stimulated by a flash
of light delivered through the goggles are affected by ACh, which in turn
allows those nerve networks to associate the visual cue with the reward.
Because brain structures are highly conserved in mammals, the findings likely
have parallels in humans, they say.
"We've
discovered that nerve cells in this part of the brain, the primary visual
cortex, seem to be able to develop molecular memories, helping us understand
how animals learn to predict rewarding outcomes," says Marshall Hussain
Shuler, Ph.D., assistant professor of neuroscience at the Institute for Basic
Biomedical Sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
To
maximize survival, an animal's brain has to remember what cues precede a
positive or negative event, allowing the animal to alter its behavior to
increase rewards and decrease mishaps. In the Hopkins-MIT study, the
researchers sought clarity about how the brain links visual information to more
complex information about time and reward.
The
presiding theory, Hussain Shuler says, assumed that this connection was made in
areas devoted to "high-level" processing, like the frontal cortex,
which is known to be important for learning and memory. The primary visual
cortex seemed to simply receive information from the eyes and
"re-piece" the visual world together before presenting it to
decision-making parts of the brain.
To
monitor the vision-reward connection process, the team fitted rats with special
goggles that let researchers flash a light before either their left or right
eye. Thirsty rats with goggles were given access to a water spout inside a
testing chamber. When they approached the water spout, a brief visual cue was
presented to one eye.
If
light was sent to the left eye, the water spout would have to be licked a few
times before water came to the rat; if light was sent to the right eye, the rat
would have to lick many more times before water came. After a few daily
sessions of such "conditioning" (not unlike Pavlov's famous
dog-bell-reward experiments), the rats learned how long they would have to lick
before getting a water reward. If they didn't get the reward in the expected
amount of time, they would give up and leave the spout.
Monitoring
the pattern of electrical signals given off by individual nerve cells in the
rat brains, the researchers found that the signals' "spikes" weren't
just reflecting the visual cue alone. Rather, the signals seemed to relay the
time of expected reward delivery through altered spiking patterns. They also
saw that many nerve cells seemed to report one or the other visual cue-reward
interval, but not both. In cells stimulated by a flash to the left eye, the
electrical signal returned to its baseline after a short delay, in sync with
the timing of the water reward; a cue to the right eye correlated with a longer
delay, also in sync with the reward. According to the researchers, the amount
of time that passed before nerve cells returned to their resting state was the
brain's way of setting up a "timed expectation."
Knowing
that the basal forebrain is implicated in learning, the researchers wanted to
know if their observations could be explained by nerves from the basal
forebrain delivering ACh to the vision-processing center. To remove those nerve
cells from the equation, they paired a neurotoxin with a "homing
device" that targets only ACh-releasing neurons coming from the basal
forebrain. They then repeated their experiments in trained rats that received
the neurotoxin and in those that didn't, and found that the nerve cell signals
continued to relay the old time intervals, suggesting that ACh and the basal
forebrain weren't needed to express previously learned time information.
The
researchers next used those same rats to ask if ACh is necessary for nerve
cells to learn new time delays. To do that, they switched the visual cues so
that a flash in the left eye meant a long delay and one in the right eye meant
a short one. Vision-processing nerve cells in the rats in which ACh delivery
was left intact adapted their signals to the new associations; but those in the
rats that no longer received ACh continued to relay the old associations,
suggesting that ACh is necessary to make new associations but not to express
old ones.
Hussain
Shuler explains, "When a reward is received, ACh is sent throughout the
brain and reinforces only those nerve cell connections that were recently
active. The process of conditioning continues to strengthen these nerve
connections, giving rise to a timed expectation of reward in the brain."
According
to Hussain Shuler, studies have shown that Alzheimer's patients have low levels
of ACh and have trouble forming new memories. Though medication may elevate
ACh, alleviation of symptoms is limited. "Our research explains that
limitation," he says. "Therapeutically, we predict that the problem
isn't just low levels of ACh -- the timing of ACh delivery is key."
Other
authors of the report include Emma Roach of the Johns Hopkins University School
of Medicine and Alexander Chubykin and Mark Bear of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology.
This
work was supported by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health
(R01MH084911), the National Institute on Drug Abuse (F31DA026687), the National
Eye Institute (R01EYO12309), the National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development (R01HD046943) and The Johns Hopkins University.
Source: Johns Hopkins Medicine
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