scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Dynamic Dopamine Modulation in the Basal Ganglia: A Neurocomputational Account of Cognitive Deficits in Medicated and Nonmedicated Parkinsonism

TLDR
In this article, a neural network model that instantiates key biological properties and provides insight into the underlying role of DA in the basal ganglia during learning and execution of cognitive tasks was presented.
Abstract
Dopamine (DA) depletion in the basal ganglia (BG) of Parkinson's patients gives rise to both frontal-like and implicit learning impairments. Dopaminergic medication alleviates some cognitive deficits but impairs those that depend on intact areas of the BG, apparently due to DA "overdose." These findings are difficult to accommodate with verbal theories of BG/DA function, owing to complexity of system dynamics: DA dynamically modulates function in the BG, which is itself a modulatory system. This article presents a neural network model that instantiates key biological properties and provides insight into the underlying role of DA in the BG during learning and execution of cognitive tasks. Specifically, the BG modulates the execution of "actions" (e.g., motor responses and working memory updating) being considered in different parts of the frontal cortex. Phasic changes in DA, which occur during error feedback, dynamically modulate the BG threshold for facilitating/suppressing a cortical command in response to particular stimuli. Reduced dynamic range of DA explains Parkinson and DA overdose deficits with a single underlying dysfunction, despite overall differences in raw DA levels. Simulated Parkinsonism and medication effects provide a theoretical basis for behavioral data in probabilistic classification and reversal tasks. The model also provides novel testable predictions for neuropsychological and pharmacological studies, and motivates further investigation of BG/DA interactions with the prefrontal cortex in working memory.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Dopamine in Motivational Control: Rewarding, Aversive, and Alerting

TL;DR: It is proposed that dopamine neurons come in multiple types that are connected with distinct brain networks and have distinct roles in motivational control, and it is hypothesized that these dopaminergic pathways for value, salience, and alerting cooperate to support adaptive behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inverted-U-shaped dopamine actions on human working memory and cognitive control.

TL;DR: Evidence from a series of studies with experimental animals, healthy humans, and patients with Parkinson's disease suggests the existence of an optimum DA level for cognitive function implicates the need to take into account baseline levels of DA when isolating the effects of DA.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conflict monitoring and decision making: reconciling two perspectives on anterior cingulate function.

TL;DR: Juxtaposing the conflict-monitoring and decision-making accounts suggests an extension of the Conflict-Monitoring theory, by which conflict would act as a teaching signal driving a form of avoidance learning, to bias behavioral decision making toward cognitively efficient tasks and strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hold your horses: impulsivity, deep brain stimulation, and medication in parkinsonism.

TL;DR: It is shown that DBS selectively interferes with the normal ability to slow down when faced with decision conflict, which implicate independent mechanisms leading to impulsivity in treated Parkinson's patients and were predicted by a single neurocomputational model of the basal ganglia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Making Working Memory Work: A Computational Model of Learning in the Prefrontal Cortex and Basal Ganglia

TL;DR: This article presents an attempt to deconstruct this homunculus through powerful learning mechanisms that allow a computational model of the prefrontal cortex to control both itself and other brain areas in a strategic, task-appropriate manner.
References
More filters
Book

The organization of behavior

D. O. Hebb
Journal ArticleDOI

A Neural Substrate of Prediction and Reward

TL;DR: Findings in this work indicate that dopaminergic neurons in the primate whose fluctuating output apparently signals changes or errors in the predictions of future salient and rewarding events can be understood through quantitative theories of adaptive optimizing control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parallel Organization of Functionally Segregated Circuits Linking Basal Ganglia and Cortex

TL;DR: The basal ganglia serve primarily to integrate diverse inputs from the entire cerebral cortex and to "funnel" these influences, via the ventrolateral thalamus, to the motor cortex.
Journal ArticleDOI

The functional anatomy of basal ganglia disorders.

TL;DR: A model in which specific types of basal ganglia disorders are associated with changes in the function of subpopulations of striatal projection neurons is proposed, which suggests that the activity of sub Populations of Striatal projections neurons is differentially regulated by striatal afferents and that different striatal projections may mediate different aspects of motor control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Learning to Predict by the Methods of Temporal Differences

Richard S. Sutton
- 01 Aug 1988 - 
TL;DR: This article introduces a class of incremental learning procedures specialized for prediction – that is, for using past experience with an incompletely known system to predict its future behavior – and proves their convergence and optimality for special cases and relation to supervised-learning methods.
Related Papers (5)