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Dopamine dependence in aggregate feedback learning: A computational cognitive neuroscience approach.
Valentin, Vivian V; Maddox, W Todd; Ashby, F Gregory.
Affiliation
  • Valentin VV; Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, United States. Electronic address: valentin@psych.ucsb.edu.
  • Maddox WT; Department of Psychology, University of Texas, 108 E. Dean Keeton, Stop A8000, Austin, TX 78712-1043, United States. Electronic address: wtoddmaddox@gmail.com.
  • Ashby FG; Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, United States. Electronic address: ashby@psych.ucsb.edu.
Brain Cogn ; 109: 1-18, 2016 11.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27596541
ABSTRACT
Procedural learning of skills depends on dopamine-mediated striatal plasticity. Most prior work investigated single stimulus-response procedural learning followed by feedback. However, many skills include several actions that must be performed before feedback is available. A new procedural-learning task is developed in which three independent and successive unsupervised categorization responses receive aggregate feedback indicating either that all three responses were correct, or at least one response was incorrect. Experiment 1 showed superior learning of stimuli in position 3, and that learning in the first two positions was initially compromised, and then recovered. An extensive theoretical analysis that used parameter space partitioning found that a large class of procedural-learning models, which predict propagation of dopamine release from feedback to stimuli, and/or an eligibility trace, fail to fully account for these data. The analysis also suggested that any dopamine released to the second or third stimulus impaired categorization learning in the first and second positions. A second experiment tested and confirmed a novel prediction of this large class of procedural-learning models that if the to-be-learned actions are introduced one-by-one in succession then learning is much better if training begins with the first action (and works forwards) than if it begins with the last action (and works backwards).
Subject(s)
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Dopamine / Concept Formation / Feedback, Psychological / Cognitive Neuroscience / Learning / Models, Theoretical Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Adult / Humans Language: En Journal: Brain Cogn Year: 2016 Document type: Article Publication country: EEUU / ESTADOS UNIDOS / ESTADOS UNIDOS DA AMERICA / EUA / UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES OF AMERICA / US / USA

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Dopamine / Concept Formation / Feedback, Psychological / Cognitive Neuroscience / Learning / Models, Theoretical Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Adult / Humans Language: En Journal: Brain Cogn Year: 2016 Document type: Article Publication country: EEUU / ESTADOS UNIDOS / ESTADOS UNIDOS DA AMERICA / EUA / UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES OF AMERICA / US / USA