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Lesions of the lateral habenula facilitate active avoidance learning and threat extinction.
Behav Brain Res. 2017 02 01; 318:12-17.BB

Abstract

The lateral habenula (LHb) is an epithalamic brain structure that provides strong projections to midbrain monoaminergic systems that are involved in motivation, emotion, and reinforcement learning. LHb neurons are known to convey information about aversive outcomes and negative prediction errors, suggesting a role in learning from aversive events. To test this idea, we examined the effects of electrolytic lesions of the LHb on signaled two-way active avoidance learning in which rats were trained to avoid an unconditioned stimulus (US) by taking a proactive shuttling response to an auditory conditioned stimulus (CS). The lesioned animals learned the avoidance response significantly faster than the control groups. In a separate experiment, we also investigated whether the LHb contributes to Pavlovian threat (fear) conditioning and extinction. Following paired presentations of the CS and the US, LHb-lesioned animals showed normal acquisition of conditioned response (CR) measured with freezing. However, extinction of the CR in the subsequent CS-only session was significantly faster. The enhanced performance in avoidance learning and in threat extinction jointly suggests that the LHb normally plays an inhibitory role in learning driven by absence of aversive outcomes.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Psychology, Korea University, Seoul 136-701, Republic of Korea.Department of Psychology, Korea University, Seoul 136-701, Republic of Korea.Department of Psychology, Korea University, Seoul 136-701, Republic of Korea.Department of Psychology, Korea University, Seoul 136-701, Republic of Korea. Electronic address: j-schoi@korea.ac.kr.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

27732891

Citation

Song, Mihee, et al. "Lesions of the Lateral Habenula Facilitate Active Avoidance Learning and Threat Extinction." Behavioural Brain Research, vol. 318, 2017, pp. 12-17.
Song M, Jo YS, Lee YK, et al. Lesions of the lateral habenula facilitate active avoidance learning and threat extinction. Behav Brain Res. 2017;318:12-17.
Song, M., Jo, Y. S., Lee, Y. K., & Choi, J. S. (2017). Lesions of the lateral habenula facilitate active avoidance learning and threat extinction. Behavioural Brain Research, 318, 12-17. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2016.10.013
Song M, et al. Lesions of the Lateral Habenula Facilitate Active Avoidance Learning and Threat Extinction. Behav Brain Res. 2017 02 1;318:12-17. PubMed PMID: 27732891.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Lesions of the lateral habenula facilitate active avoidance learning and threat extinction. AU - Song,Mihee, AU - Jo,Yong Sang, AU - Lee,Yeon-Kyung, AU - Choi,June-Seek, Y1 - 2016/10/11/ PY - 2016/06/18/received PY - 2016/10/04/revised PY - 2016/10/07/accepted PY - 2016/10/30/pubmed PY - 2017/11/7/medline PY - 2016/10/13/entrez KW - Extinction KW - Fear conditioning KW - Lateral habenula KW - Rat KW - Reinforcement learning KW - Two-way active avoidance SP - 12 EP - 17 JF - Behavioural brain research JO - Behav Brain Res VL - 318 N2 - The lateral habenula (LHb) is an epithalamic brain structure that provides strong projections to midbrain monoaminergic systems that are involved in motivation, emotion, and reinforcement learning. LHb neurons are known to convey information about aversive outcomes and negative prediction errors, suggesting a role in learning from aversive events. To test this idea, we examined the effects of electrolytic lesions of the LHb on signaled two-way active avoidance learning in which rats were trained to avoid an unconditioned stimulus (US) by taking a proactive shuttling response to an auditory conditioned stimulus (CS). The lesioned animals learned the avoidance response significantly faster than the control groups. In a separate experiment, we also investigated whether the LHb contributes to Pavlovian threat (fear) conditioning and extinction. Following paired presentations of the CS and the US, LHb-lesioned animals showed normal acquisition of conditioned response (CR) measured with freezing. However, extinction of the CR in the subsequent CS-only session was significantly faster. The enhanced performance in avoidance learning and in threat extinction jointly suggests that the LHb normally plays an inhibitory role in learning driven by absence of aversive outcomes. SN - 1872-7549 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/27732891/Lesions_of_the_lateral_habenula_facilitate_active_avoidance_learning_and_threat_extinction_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -