Double dissociation of the effects of selective nucleus accumbens core and shell lesions on impulsive-choice behaviour and salience learning in rats

The nucleus accumbens can be subdivided into at least two anatomically distinct subregions: a dorsolateral ‘core’ and a ventromedial ‘shell’, and this distinction may extend to a functional dissociation. Here, we contrasted the effects of selective excitotoxic core and medial shell lesions on impuls...

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Veröffentlicht in:The European journal of neuroscience 2005-11, Vol.22 (10), p.2605-2616
Hauptverfasser: Pothuizen, Helen H. J., Jongen-Rêlo, Ana L., Feldon, Joram, Yee, Benjamin K.
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container_issue 10
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creator Pothuizen, Helen H. J.
Jongen-Rêlo, Ana L.
Feldon, Joram
Yee, Benjamin K.
description The nucleus accumbens can be subdivided into at least two anatomically distinct subregions: a dorsolateral ‘core’ and a ventromedial ‘shell’, and this distinction may extend to a functional dissociation. Here, we contrasted the effects of selective excitotoxic core and medial shell lesions on impulsive‐choice behaviour using a delayed reward choice paradigm and a differential reward for low rates of responding (DRL) test, against a form of salience learning known as latent inhibition (LI). Core lesions led to enhanced impulsive choices as evidenced by a more pronounced shift from choosing a continuously reinforced lever to a partially reinforced lever, when a delay between lever press and reward delivery was imposed selectively on the former. The core lesions also impaired performance on a DRL task that required withholding the response for a fixed period of time in order to earn a reward. Medial shell lesions had no effect on these two tasks, but abolished the LI effect, as revealed by the failure of stimulus pre‐exposure to retard subsequent conditioning to that stimulus in an active avoidance procedure in the lesioned animals. As expected, selective core lesions spared LI. The double dissociations demonstrated here support a functional segregation between nucleus accumbens core and shell, and add weight to the hypothesis that the core, but not the shell, subregion of the nucleus accumbens is preferentially involved in the control of choice behaviour under delayed reinforcement conditions and in the inhibitory control of goal‐directed behaviour.
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Animals
Avoidance Learning - physiology
behavioural inhibition
Choice Behavior - physiology
delayed reinforcement
DRL
Immunohistochemistry
latent inhibition
Learning - physiology
Male
Neurons - physiology
Nucleus Accumbens - cytology
Nucleus Accumbens - physiology
Rats
Rats, Wistar
Reaction Time - physiology
Reinforcement Schedule
Reward
ventral striatum
title Double dissociation of the effects of selective nucleus accumbens core and shell lesions on impulsive-choice behaviour and salience learning in rats
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