Striatal Microstimulation Induces Persistent and Repetitive Negative Decision-Making Predicted by Striatal Beta-Band Oscillation

© 2018 Elsevier Inc. Persistent thoughts inducing irrationally pessimistic and repetitive decisions are often symptoms of mood and anxiety disorders. Regional neural hyperactivities have been associated with these disorders, but it remains unclear whether there is a specific brain region causally in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Amemori, Ken-ichi, Amemori, Satoko, Gibson, Daniel J, Graybiel, Ann M
Other Authors: McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier BV 2021
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/135799
Description
Summary:© 2018 Elsevier Inc. Persistent thoughts inducing irrationally pessimistic and repetitive decisions are often symptoms of mood and anxiety disorders. Regional neural hyperactivities have been associated with these disorders, but it remains unclear whether there is a specific brain region causally involved in these persistent valuations. Here, we identified potential sources of such persistent states by microstimulating the striatum of macaques performing a task by which we could quantitatively estimate their subjective pessimistic states using their choices to accept or reject conflicting offers. We found that this microstimulation induced irrationally repetitive choices with negative evaluations. Local field potentials recorded in the same microstimulation sessions exhibited modulations of beta-band oscillatory activity that paralleled the persistent negative states influencing repetitive decisions. These findings demonstrate that local striatal zones can causally affect subjective states influencing persistent negative valuation and that abnormal beta-band oscillations can be associated with persistency in valuation accompanied by an anxiety-like state. Amemori et al. identified candidate subcortical loci potentially related to persistency of anxiety-like states and inflexibility in OCD. The authors’ work in non-human primates shows that striatal stimulation induces repetitive negative choice pattern, accompanied by modulation of striatal beta oscillation.