Neuron
Volume 67, Issue 3, 12 August 2010, Pages 499-510
Journal home page for Neuron

Article
Multiple Timescales of Memory in Lateral Habenula and Dopamine Neurons

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2010.06.031Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Summary

Midbrain dopamine neurons are thought to signal predictions about future rewards based on the memory of past rewarding experience. Little is known about the source of their reward memory and the factors that control its timescale. Here we recorded from dopamine neurons, as well as one of their sources of input, the lateral habenula, while animals predicted upcoming rewards based on the past reward history. We found that lateral habenula and dopamine neurons accessed two distinct reward memories: a short-timescale memory expressed at the start of the task and a near-optimal long-timescale memory expressed when a future reward outcome was revealed. The short- and long-timescale memories were expressed in different forms of reward-oriented eye movements. Our data show that the habenula-dopamine pathway contains multiple timescales of memory and provide evidence for their role in motivated behavior.

Highlights

► Lateral habenula and dopamine neurons are influenced by the memory of past rewards ► Over the course of a trial, neurons change between short- and long-timescale memories ► These memory timescales may be linked to specific forms of reward-oriented behavior

SYSNEURO

Cited by (0)