Cholinergic Interneurons Use Orbitofrontal Input to Track Beliefs about Current State.
Thomas A StalnakerBen BergNavkiran AujlaGeoffrey SchoenbaumPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Striatal cholinergic interneurons (CINs) are thought to be identical to tonically active neurons. These neurons have long been thought to have an important influence on striatal processing during reward-related learning. Recently, a more specific function for striatal CINs has been suggested, which is that they are necessary for striatal learning to be compartmentalized into different states as the state of the environment changes. Here we report that putative CINs appear to track rats' beliefs about which environmental state is current. We further show that this property of CINs depends on orbitofrontal cortex input and is correlated with choices made by rats. These findings could provide new insight into neuropsychiatric diseases that involve improper generalization between different contexts.