Data for: Reciprocal cortico-amygdala connections regulate prosocial and selfish choices in mice
Decisions that favor one’s own interest versus the interest of another individual depend on context and the relationships between individuals. The neurobiology underlying selfish choices or choices that benefit others is not understood. We developed a two-choice social decision-making task in which...
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Zusammenfassung: | Decisions that favor one’s own interest versus the interest of another
individual depend on context and the relationships between individuals.
The neurobiology underlying selfish choices or choices that benefit others
is not understood. We developed a two-choice social decision-making task
in which mice can decide whether or not to share a reward with their
conspecifics. Preference for altruistic choices was modulated by
familiarity, sex, social contact, hunger, hierarchical status, and
emotional state matching. Fiber photometry recordings and chemogenetic
manipulations demonstrated that BLA neurons are involved in the
establishment of prosocial decisions. In particular, BLA neurons
projecting to the prelimbic region (PL) of the PFC mediated the
development of a preference for altruistic choices, whereas PL projections
to the BLA modulated self-interest motives on decision-making. This
provides a neurobiological model of altruistic and selfish choices with
relevance to pathologies associated with dysfunctions in social
decision-making. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.bnzs7h4dv |