Premium
Medial thalamus in the territory of oculomotor basal ganglia represents stable object value
Author(s) -
Yasuda Masaharu,
Hikosaka Okihide
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1111/ejn.14202
Subject(s) - thalamus , neuroscience , basal ganglia , superior colliculus , anatomy , inferior colliculus , nucleus , psychology , biology , central nervous system
Many visual objects are attached with values which were created by our long rewarding history. Such stable object values attract gaze. We previously found that the output pathway of basal ganglia from caudal‐dorsal‐lateral portion of substantia nigra pars reticulata (cdl SN r) to superior colliculus ( SC ) carries robust stable value signal to execute the automatic choice of valuable objects. An important question here is whether stable value signal in basal ganglia can influence on other inner processing such as perception, attention, emotion, or arousal than motor execution. The key brain circuit is another output path of basal ganglia: the pathway from SN r to temporal and frontal lobes through thalamus. To examine the existence of stable value signal in this pathway, we explored thalamus in a wide range. We found that many neurons in the medial thalamus represented stable value. Histological examination showed that the recorded sites of those neurons included ventral anterior nucleus, pars magnocellularis ( VA mc) which is the main target of nigrothalamic projection. Consistent with the SN r GABA rgic projection, the latency of value signal in the medial thalamus was later than cdl SN r, and the sign of value coding in the medial thalamus was opposite to cdl SN r. As is the case with cdl SN r neurons, the medial thalamus neurons showed no sensitivity to frequently updated value (flexible value). These results suggest that the pathway from cdl SN r to the medial thalamus influences on various aspects of cognitive processing by propagating stable value signal to the wide cortical area.