Reinforcement determines the timing dependence of corticostriatal synaptic plasticity in vivo
Simon D. Fisher,
Paul B. Robertson,
Melony J. Black,
Peter Redgrave,
Mark A. Sagar,
Wickliffe C. Abraham and
John N.J. Reynolds ()
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Simon D. Fisher: University of Otago
Paul B. Robertson: University of Auckland
Melony J. Black: University of Otago
Peter Redgrave: University of Sheffield
Mark A. Sagar: University of Auckland
Wickliffe C. Abraham: University of Otago
John N.J. Reynolds: University of Otago
Nature Communications, 2017, vol. 8, issue 1, 1-13
Abstract:
Abstract Plasticity at synapses between the cortex and striatum is considered critical for learning novel actions. However, investigations of spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) at these synapses have been performed largely in brain slice preparations, without consideration of physiological reinforcement signals. This has led to conflicting findings, and hampered the ability to relate neural plasticity to behavior. Using intracellular striatal recordings in intact rats, we show here that pairing presynaptic and postsynaptic activity induces robust Hebbian bidirectional plasticity, dependent on dopamine and adenosine signaling. Such plasticity, however, requires the arrival of a reward-conditioned sensory reinforcement signal within 2 s of the STDP pairing, thus revealing a timing-dependent eligibility trace on which reinforcement operates. These observations are validated with both computational modeling and behavioral testing. Our results indicate that Hebbian corticostriatal plasticity can be induced by classical reinforcement learning mechanisms, and might be central to the acquisition of novel actions.
Date: 2017
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DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-00394-x
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