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Motivational salience signal in the basal forebrain is coupled with faster and more precise decision speed

The survival of animals depends critically on prioritizing responses to motivationally salient stimuli. While it is generally believed that motivational salience increases decision speed, the quantitative relationship between motivational salience and decision speed, measured by reaction time (RT),...

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Published in:PLoS biology 2014-03, Vol.12 (3), p.e1001811-e1001811
Main Authors: Avila, Irene, Lin, Shih-Chieh
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description The survival of animals depends critically on prioritizing responses to motivationally salient stimuli. While it is generally believed that motivational salience increases decision speed, the quantitative relationship between motivational salience and decision speed, measured by reaction time (RT), remains unclear. Here we show that the neural correlate of motivational salience in the basal forebrain (BF), defined independently of RT, is coupled with faster and also more precise decision speed. In rats performing a reward-biased simple RT task, motivational salience was encoded by BF bursting response that occurred before RT. We found that faster RTs were tightly coupled with stronger BF motivational salience signals. Furthermore, the fraction of RT variability reflecting the contribution of intrinsic noise in the decision-making process was actively suppressed in faster RT distributions with stronger BF motivational salience signals. Artificially augmenting the BF motivational salience signal via electrical stimulation led to faster and more precise RTs and supports a causal relationship. Together, these results not only describe for the first time, to our knowledge, the quantitative relationship between motivational salience and faster decision speed, they also reveal the quantitative coupling relationship between motivational salience and more precise RT. Our results further establish the existence of an early and previously unrecognized step in the decision-making process that determines both the RT speed and variability of the entire decision-making process and suggest that this novel decision step is dictated largely by the BF motivational salience signal. Finally, our study raises the hypothesis that the dysregulation of decision speed in conditions such as depression, schizophrenia, and cognitive aging may result from the functional impairment of the motivational salience signal encoded by the poorly understood noncholinergic BF neurons.
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subjects Aging
Aircraft accidents & safety
Animal cognition
Animals
Biology and Life Sciences
Cellular signal transduction
Decision Making
Light
Male
Motivation
Neurological research
Neurons
Physiological aspects
Prosencephalon
Prosencephalon - physiology
Rats
Rats, Long-Evans
Reaction Time
Research and Analysis Methods
Reward
Schizophrenia
Studies
Time Factors
title Motivational salience signal in the basal forebrain is coupled with faster and more precise decision speed
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