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Touchscreen-based assessment of risky-choice in mice

Lucas R. Glover, Abagail F. Postle, Andrew Holmes

2020Behavioural Brain Research19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Addictions are characterized by choices made to satisfy the addiction despite the risk it could produce an adverse consequence. Here, we developed a murine version of a 'risky decision-making' task (RDT), in which mice could respond on a touchscreen panel to obtain either a large milkshake reward associated with varying probability of footshock, or a smaller amount of the same reward that was never punished. Results showed that (the following font is incorrectly smaller/subscripted) mice shifted choice from the large to small reward stimulus as shock probability increased. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed more Fos-positive cells in prelimbic cortex (PL) and basal amygdala (BA) after RDT testing, and a strong anti-correlation between infralimbic cortex (IL) activity and choice of the large reward stimulus under likely (75-100 % probability) punishment. These findings establish an assay for risky choice in mice and provide preliminary insight into the underlying neural substrates.

Topics & Concepts

Infralimbic cortexTouchscreenPsychologyPrefrontal cortexNeuroscienceBasolateral amygdalaAmygdalaAddictionStimulus (psychology)Cognitive psychologyCognitionComputer scienceOperating systemNeurotransmitter Receptor Influence on BehaviorNeuroendocrine regulation and behaviorMemory and Neural Mechanisms
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