Tonically active neurons in the monkey striatum do not preferentially respond to appetitive stimuli

Abstract The tonically active neurons in the monkey striatum respond to stimuli presented during the performance of appetitively motivated behavior. To test whether these neurons are selectively responsive to the appetitive properties of stimuli, we studied their responsiveness to three different stimuli presented in an unsignalled manner to monkeys not performing any behavioral tasks: (1) an appetitive liquid, eliciting licking movements; (2) an aversive air puff directed towards the face, eliciting eyelid closure and facial movements; (3) a neutral sound, eliciting no overt behavioral reactions. The great majority of the tonic striatal neurons tested in two monkeys showed pronounced responses to the delivery of liquid (338 of 388 neurons, 87%) or the onset of the air puff stimulus (168 of 204, 82%). In contrast, few neurons (15 of 68, 22%) were modulated by the sound. The majority (80%) of the neurons tested with appetitive and aversive stimuli (n=189) responded to both types of stimulus. The characteristics of neuronal responses to the liquid were generally not similar to those described for the air puff in terms of response pattern and response duration. This suggests the existence of differences in the encoding of the affective significance of stimuli. It is concluded that tonic striatal neurons might function to differentiate stimuli that are important to the animal from those that are not, regardless of the specific motivational attributes of relevant stimuli.

[1]  Eric Legallet,et al.  Responses of tonically discharging neurons in the monkey striatum to primary rewards delivered during different behavioral states , 1997, Experimental Brain Research.

[2]  J. Rajkowski,et al.  Tonically discharging putamen neurons exhibit set-dependent responses. , 1984, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[3]  A. Graybiel,et al.  Effect of the nigrostriatal dopamine system on acquired neural responses in the striatum of behaving monkeys. , 1994, Science.

[4]  E. Vaadia,et al.  Neuronal synchronization of tonically active neurons in the striatum of normal and parkinsonian primates. , 1996, Journal of neurophysiology.

[5]  P. Apicella,et al.  Responses of tonically discharging neurons in monkey striatum to visual stimuli presented under passive conditions and during task performance , 1996, Neuroscience Letters.

[6]  Dopamine receptor-mediated mechanisms involved in the expression of learned activity of primate striatal neurons(運動学習に伴うサルの線条体ニューロンの活動の変容におけるドーパミン系の役割) , 1998 .

[7]  W. Schultz,et al.  Preferential activation of midbrain dopamine neurons by appetitive rather than aversive stimuli , 1996, Nature.

[8]  A. Graybiel,et al.  Responses of tonically active neurons in the primate's striatum undergo systematic changes during behavioral sensorimotor conditioning , 1994, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[9]  A. Graybiel,et al.  Temporal and spatial characteristics of tonically active neurons of the primate's striatum. , 1995, Journal of neurophysiology.