Brain Stimulation Reward Supports More Consistent and Accurate Rodent Decision-Making than Food Reward
نویسندگان
چکیده
Animal models of decision-making rely on an animal's motivation to decide and its ability to detect differences among various alternatives. Food reinforcement, although commonly used, is associated with problematic confounds, especially satiety. Here, we examined the use of brain stimulation reward (BSR) as an alternative reinforcer in rodent models of decision-making and compared it with the effectiveness of sugar pellets. The discriminability of various BSR frequencies was compared to differing numbers of sugar pellets in separate free-choice tasks. We found that BSR was more discriminable and motivated greater task engagement and more consistent preference for the larger reward. We then investigated whether rats prefer BSR of varying frequencies over sugar pellets. We found that animals showed either a clear preference for sugar reward or no preference between reward modalities, depending on the frequency of the BSR alternative and the size of the sugar reward. Overall, these results suggest that BSR is an effective reinforcer in rodent decision-making tasks, removing food-related confounds and resulting in more accurate, consistent, and reliable metrics of choice.
منابع مشابه
Correction: McMurray et al., Brain Stimulation Reward Supports More Consistent and Accurate Rodent Decision-Making than Food Reward (eNeuro March/April 2017, 4(2) e0015-17.2017 1-13 http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/ENEURO.0015-17.2017)
In the article “Brain Stimulation Reward Supports More Consistent and Accurate Rodent Decision-Making than Food Reward,” by Matthew S. McMurray, Sineadh M. Conway, and Jamie D. Roitman, which appeared on e0015-17.2017 of the April 18, 2017, issue, there was a mislabeled axis on Figure 3D, which led to an inaccuracy in the figure caption and statistical table (Table 1). The y-axis of this figure...
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