Variability in Dopamine Genes Dissociates Model-Based and Model-Free Reinforcement Learning.
Bradley B DollKevin G BathNathaniel D DawMichael J FrankPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
Decisions can stem reflexively from their previously associated outcomes or flexibly from deliberative consideration of potential choice outcomes. Research implicates a dopamine-dependent striatal learning mechanism in the former type of choice. Although recent work has indicated that dopamine is also involved in flexible, goal-directed decision-making, it remains unclear whether it also contributes via striatum or via the dopamine-dependent working memory function of prefrontal cortex. We examined genetic indices of dopamine function in these regions and their relation to the two choice strategies. We found that striatal dopamine function related most clearly to the reflexive strategy, as previously shown, and that prefrontal dopamine related most clearly to the flexible strategy. These findings suggest that dissociable brain regions support dissociable choice strategies.
Keyphrases
- prefrontal cortex
- uric acid
- working memory
- decision making
- functional connectivity
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide
- type diabetes
- gene expression
- multiple sclerosis
- white matter
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- risk assessment
- brain injury
- insulin resistance
- human health
- cerebral ischemia
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- weight loss