失控的安全:多巴胺和防御。

IF 4.7 2区 心理学 Q1 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Behavioral and Brain Functions Pub Date : 2016-05-23 DOI:10.1186/s12993-016-0099-7
Kevin Lloyd, Peter Dayan
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引用次数: 43

摘要

我们对动物如何学会预测食欲结果并据此指导它们的行为有着复杂的理解。这包括定义良好的学习算法以及这些算法如何在大脑中实现的细节。多巴胺在这个逐渐展开的故事中扮演了重要的角色,它似乎包含了一种学习信号,用于预测奖励和有效的行动,同时也是行为活力的调节剂。相比之下,尽管在逆境中选择正确的行动并积极执行这些行动至少同样重要,但我们对在令人厌恶的环境中学习和行为的理解却没有得到很好的发展。我们通过多巴胺和靶如D2受体在纹状体中的作用来研究厌恶加工。我们考虑了一些关键因素,如动物认为自己对环境关键方面的控制程度,“更好”和“好”的实际或预测未来状态之间的区别,以及对多巴胺特定形式对手的潜在需求,以确保状态值的适当校准。
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Safety out of control: dopamine and defence.

We enjoy a sophisticated understanding of how animals learn to predict appetitive outcomes and direct their behaviour accordingly. This encompasses well-defined learning algorithms and details of how these might be implemented in the brain. Dopamine has played an important part in this unfolding story, appearing to embody a learning signal for predicting rewards and stamping in useful actions, while also being a modulator of behavioural vigour. By contrast, although choosing correct actions and executing them vigorously in the face of adversity is at least as important, our understanding of learning and behaviour in aversive settings is less well developed. We examine aversive processing through the medium of the role of dopamine and targets such as D2 receptors in the striatum. We consider critical factors such as the degree of control that an animal believes it exerts over key aspects of its environment, the distinction between 'better' and 'good' actual or predicted future states, and the potential requirement for a particular form of opponent to dopamine to ensure proper calibration of state values.

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来源期刊
Behavioral and Brain Functions
Behavioral and Brain Functions 医学-行为科学
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: A well-established journal in the field of behavioral and cognitive neuroscience, Behavioral and Brain Functions welcomes manuscripts which provide insight into the neurobiological mechanisms underlying behavior and brain function, or dysfunction. The journal gives priority to manuscripts that combine both neurobiology and behavior in a non-clinical manner.
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