Neuron
Volume 66, Issue 3, 13 May 2010, Pages 449-460
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Article
Distinct Roles of Rodent Orbitofrontal and Medial Prefrontal Cortex in Decision Making

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Summary

We investigated how different subregions of rodent prefrontal cortex contribute to value-based decision making, by comparing neural signals related to animal's choice, its outcome, and action value in orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) of rats performing a dynamic two-armed bandit task. Neural signals for upcoming action selection arose in the mPFC, including the anterior cingulate cortex, only immediately before the behavioral manifestation of animal's choice, suggesting that rodent prefrontal cortex is not involved in advanced action planning. Both OFC and mPFC conveyed signals related to the animal's past choices and their outcomes over multiple trials, but neural signals for chosen value and reward prediction error were more prevalent in the OFC. Our results suggest that rodent OFC and mPFC serve distinct roles in value-based decision making and that the OFC plays a prominent role in updating the values of outcomes expected from chosen actions.

Highlights

► Rat prefrontal cortex does not convey upcoming action selection signals ► Previous choice and outcome signals are broadly distributed in rat prefrontal cortex ► Orbitofrontal cortex encodes both positive and negative reward prediction errors ► Signals needed to update decision-making strategies converge in orbitofrontal cortex

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