The priming effect of rewarding brain stimulation in rats depends on both the cost and strength of reward but survives blockade of D2‐like dopamine receptors

Author:

Evangelista Czarina1,Mehrez Norhan1,Boisvert Esthelle Ewusi1,Brake Wayne G.1ORCID,Shizgal Peter1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Studies in Behavioural Neurobiology Concordia University Montréal Québec Canada

Abstract

AbstractReceipt of an intense reward boosts motivation to work for more of that reward. This phenomenon is called the priming effect of rewards. Using a novel measurement method, we show that the priming effect of rewarding electrical brain stimulation depends on the cost, as well as on the strength, of the anticipated reward. Previous research on the priming effect of electrical brain stimulation utilized a runway paradigm in which running speed serves as the measure of motivation. In the present study, the measure of motivation was the vigour with which rats executed a two‐lever response chain, in a standard operant‐conditioning chamber, to earn rewarding electrical stimulation of the lateral hypothalamus. In a second experiment, we introduced a modification that entails self‐administered priming stimulation and alternating blocks of primed and unprimed trials. Reliable, consistent priming effects of substantial magnitude were obtained in the modified paradigm, which is closely analogous to the runway paradigm. In a third experiment, the modified paradigm served to assess the dependence of the priming effect on dopamine D2‐like receptors. The priming effect proved resilient to the effect of eticlopride, a selective D2‐like receptor antagonist. These results are discussed within the framework of a new model of brain reward circuitry in which non‐dopaminergic medial forebrain bundle fibers and dopamine axons provide parallel inputs to the final common paths for reward and incentive motivation.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Neuroscience

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