Targeted effects of ketamine on perceptual expectation during mediated learning in rats
Rationale While neural correlates of hallucinations are known, the mechanisms have remained elusive. Mechanistic insight is more practicable in animal models, in which causal relationships can be established. Recent work developing animal models of hallucination susceptibility has focused on the gen...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Psychopharmacology 2022-08, Vol.239 (8), p.2395-2405 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Rationale
While neural correlates of hallucinations are known, the mechanisms have remained elusive. Mechanistic insight is more practicable in animal models, in which causal relationships can be established. Recent work developing animal models of hallucination susceptibility has focused on the genesis of perceptual expectations and perceptual decision-making. Both processes are encompassed within mediated learning, which involves inducing a strong perceptual expectation via associative learning, retrieving that memory representation, and deciding whether this internally generated percept is predictive of an external outcome. Mediated learning in rodents is sensitive to many psychotomimetic manipulations. However, we do not know if these manipulations selectively alter learning of perceptual expectations versus their retrieval because of their presence throughout all task phases.
Objectives
Here, we used mediated learning to study the targeted effect of a psychotomimetic agent on the retrieval of perceptual expectation.
Methods
We administered (R,S)-ketamine to rats selectively during the devaluation phase of a mediated learning task, when the representation of the expected cue is retrieved, to test the hypothesis that internally generated perceptual experiences underlie this altered mediated learning.
Results
We found that ketamine increased only mediated learning at a moderate dose in rats, but impaired direct learning at the high dose.
Conclusions
These results suggest that ketamine can augment retrieval of perceptual expectations and thus this may be how it induces hallucination-like experiences in humans. More broadly, mediated learning may unite the conditioning, perceptual decision-making, and even reality monitoring accounts of psychosis in a manner that translates across species. |
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ISSN: | 0033-3158 1432-2072 1432-2072 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00213-022-06128-2 |