• Home
  • People
    Current Members
    Lab Alumni
  • Research
    Overview
    Highlights
    Methods & Tools
  • Publications
  • News
  • Resources
  • Join Us
  • Home
  • People
    Current Members
    Lab Alumni
  • Research
    Overview
    Highlights
    Methods & Tools
  • Publications
  • News
  • Resources
  • Join Us
Home > Journal Club & Teaching

Journal Club & Teaching

Sequence termination cues drive habits via dopamine-mediated credit assignment

Abstract

Mesolimbic dopamine (DA) neurons are central to sequence learning and habit formation. Yet, the mechanisms by which cue-induced DA neural activity drives goal-directed or habitual sequence execution remain unknown. We designed two novel tasks to investigate how sequence initiation and termination cues influence DA-driven behavioral strategies and learning. We found that sequence initiation and termination cues differentially affect reward expectation during action sequences, with only the termination cue contributing to greater outcome devaluation insensitivity, automaticity and behavioral chunking. Mesolimbic fiber photometry recording revealed that this habit-like behavior was associated with a rapid backpropagation in DA signals from the reward to the immediately preceding cue and with attenuated DA reward prediction error signals, which reflected greater behavioral inflexibility. Finally, in absence of external cues, brief optogenetic stimulation of VTA DA neurons at sequence termination was sufficient to drive automaticity and behavioral chunking. Our results highlight the critical role of cue-evoked DA signals at sequence termination in mediating credit assignment and driving the development of habitual action sequence execution.


Robin Magnard, Yifeng Cheng, Joanna Zhou, Haley Province, Nathalie Thiriet, Patricia H. Janak and Youna Vandaele. Sequence termination cues drive habits via dopamine-mediated credit assignment. bioRxiv, 2025-01. [LINK]


Speaker: Yingjun Tang

Time: 9:00 am, 2025/01/20

Location: CIBR A622


  • People
  • Research
  • Publications
  • News
  • Resources
  • Join Us
  • 北京脑科学与类脑研究所 - 周景峰实验室
  • Chinese Institute for Brain Research, Beijing
  • Bldg 3, 9 Yike Rd, ZGC Life Sci Park, Changping, Beijing 102206

2024 © Zhou Lab - Chinese Institute for Brain Research, Beijing - 京ICP备18029179号 ❀