Phasic nucleus accumbens dopamine release encodes effort- and delay-related costs

Academic Article

Abstract

  • Background: Optimal decision-making requires that organisms correctly evaluate both the costs and benefits of potential choices. Dopamine transmission within the nucleus accumbens (NAc) has been heavily implicated in reward-learning and decision-making, but it is unclear how dopamine release might contribute to decisions that involve costs. Methods: Cost-based decision-making was examined in rats trained to associate visual cues with either immediate or delayed rewards (delay manipulation) or low-effort or high-effort rewards (effort manipulation). After training, dopamine concentration within the NAc was monitored on a rapid time scale with fast-scan cyclic voltammetry. Results: Animals exhibited a preference for immediate or low-effort rewards over delayed or high-effort rewards of equal magnitude. Reward-predictive cues but not response execution or reward delivery evoked increases in NAc dopamine concentration. When only one response option was available, cue-evoked dopamine release reflected the value of the future reward, with larger increases in dopamine signaling higher-value rewards. In contrast, when both options were presented simultaneously, dopamine signaled the better of two options, regardless of the future choice. Conclusions: Phasic dopamine signals in the NAc reflect two different types of reward cost and encode potential rather than chosen value under choice situations. © 2010 Society of Biological Psychiatry.
  • Authors

    Published In

    Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Pubmed Id

  • 15000957
  • Author List

  • Day JJ; Jones JL; Wightman RM; Carelli RM
  • Start Page

  • 306
  • End Page

  • 309
  • Volume

  • 68
  • Issue

  • 3