• 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

Dorsomedial striatum monitors unreliability of current action policy and probes alternative one via the indirect pathway

Abstract

Previous studies revealed critical involvement of the striatum in adapting to the environment by actions that anticipate rewards from experiences as a policy. However, it remains unclear how current policy is evaluated to explore more advantageous alternatives. Here, we show that during policy-based sequential actions in a rat reversal task, the dorsomedial striatum plays an essential role in pathway-specific manner. Recording and optical manipulation of the indirect pathway showed that late-onset activity following unrewarded suboptimal action represents a lowered valuation of the current action policy and a heightened bias to try the suboptimal action. The early-onset activity complementarily mediated policy-based suppression of unrewarded action. These results demonstrate the indirect pathway’s role in monitoring unreliability of current action policy and probing alternative one. This study extends conventional understanding of consequence-guided persistence with reward-oriented action policy and provides key insights regarding how the dorsomedial striatum enables proactive and flexible adaptation to environmental changes.


Alain Rios, Satoshi Nonomura, Yutaka Sakai, Kazuto Kobayashi, Shigeki Kato, Masahiko Takada, Yoshikazu Isomura, and Minoru Kimura. Dorsomedial striatum monitors unreliability of current action policy and probes alternative one via the indirect pathway. Science Advances, 2025-10. [LINK]


Speaker: Yuanpei Mi

Time: 9:00 am, 2026/01/19

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

2021–2025 © Zhou Lab - Chinese Institute for Brain Research, Beijing - 京ICP备18029179号 ❀