Authors
Samuel M McClure, Nathaniel D Daw, P Read Montague
Publication date
2003/8/1
Source
Trends in neurosciences
Volume
26
Issue
8
Pages
423-428
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Theories of dopamine function are at a crossroads. Computational models derived from single-unit recordings capture changes in dopaminergic neuron firing rate as a prediction error signal. These models employ the prediction error signal in two roles: learning to predict future rewarding events and biasing action choice. Conversely, pharmacological inhibition or lesion of dopaminergic neuron function diminishes the ability of an animal to motivate behaviors directed at acquiring rewards. These lesion experiments have raised the possibility that dopamine release encodes a measure of the incentive value of a contemplated behavioral act. The most complete psychological idea that captures this notion frames the dopamine signal as carrying ‘incentive salience'. On the surface, these two competing accounts of dopamine function seem incommensurate. To the contrary, we demonstrate that both of these functions …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SM McClure, ND Daw, PR Montague - Trends in neurosciences, 2003