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Original Research Article
Conditioned reinforcement can be mediated by either outcome-specific or general affective representations

1  The Program in Neuroscience, School of Medicine, The University of Maryland , USA
2  The Ingenuity Project, Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, USA
3  The Departments of Neurobiology & Anatomy and Psychiatry, The University of Maryland School of Medicine, USA


Conditioned reinforcers are Pavlovian cues that support the acquisition and maintenance of new instrumental responses. Responding on the basis of conditioned rather than primary reinforcers is a pervasive part of modern life, yet we have a remarkably limited understanding of what underlying associative information is triggered by these cues to guide responding. Specifically, it is not certain whether conditioned reinforcers are effective because they evoke representations of specific outcomes or because they trigger general affective states that are independent of any specific outcome. This question has important implications for how different brain circuits might be involved in conditioned reinforcement. Here, we use specialized Pavlovian training procedures, reinforcer devaluation and transreinforcer blocking, to create cues that were biased to preferentially evoke either devaluation-insensitive, general affect representations or, devaluationsensitive, outcome-specific representations. Subsequently, these cues, along with normally conditioned control cues, were presented contingent on lever pressing.We found that intact rats learned to lever press for either the outcome or the affect cues to the same extent as for a normally conditioned cue. These results demonstrate that conditioned reinforcers can guide responding through either type of associative information. Interestingly, conditioned reinforcement was abolished in rats with basolateral amygdala lesions. Consistent with the extant literature, this result suggests a general role for basolateral amygdala in conditioned reinforcement. The implications of these data, combined with recent reports from our laboratory of a more specialized role of orbitofrontal cortex in conditioned reinforcement, will be discussed.

Keywords: pavlovian conditioning, conditioned reinforcement, reinforcer devaluation, transreinforcer blocking, orbitofrontal cortex, basolateral amygdala, rat

Citation: Burke KA, Franz TM, Miller DN and Schoenbaum G (2007) Conditioned reinforcement can be mediated by either outcome-specific or general affective representations. Front. Integr. Neurosci. (2007) 1:2. doi:10.3389/neuro.07.002.2007

Received: 27 July 2007; paper pending published: 17 September 2007; accepted: 03 October 2007; published online: 02 November 2007.

Edited by: 
Sidney A. Simon, Duke University, USA

Reviewed by: 
Mark Laubach, The John B. Pierce Laboratory, USA; Yale University School of Medicine, USA
Rui M. Costa, National Institutres of Health, USA

Copyright: © 2007 Burke, Franz, Miller and Schoenbaum. This is an open-access article subject to an exclusive license agreement between the authors and the Frontiers Research Foundation, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are credited.

*Correspondence: Geoffrey Schoenbaum, The Departments of Neurobiology & Anatomy and Psychiatry, The University of Maryland School of Medicine, 20 Penn St, HSF-2 S251, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA. e-mail: schoenbg@schoenbaumlab.org
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