1. Academic Validation
  2. Contribution of dorsal versus ventral hippocampus to the hierarchical modulation of goal-directed actions in rats

Contribution of dorsal versus ventral hippocampus to the hierarchical modulation of goal-directed actions in rats

  • Eur J Neurosci. 2023 Sep 12. doi: 10.1111/ejn.16143.
Robin Piquet 1 Angélique Faugère 1 Shauna L Parkes 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 University of Bordeaux, CNRS, INCIA, UMR 5287, Bordeaux, France.
Abstract

Adaptive behaviour often necessitates that Animals learn about events in a manner that is specific to a particular context or environment. These hierarchical organisations allow the animal to decide which action is the most appropriate when faced with ambiguous or conflicting possibilities. This study examined the role of hippocampus in enabling Animals to use the context to guide action selection. We used a hierarchical instrumental outcome devaluation task in which male rats learn that the context provides information about the unique action-outcome relations that are in effect. We first confirmed that rats encode and use hierarchical context-(action-outcome) relations. We then show that chemogenetic inhibition of ventral hippocampus impairs both the encoding and retrieval of these associations, while inhibition of dorsal hippocampus impairs only the retrieval. Importantly, neither dorsal nor ventral hippocampus was required for goal-directed behaviour per se as these impairments only emerged when rats were forced to use the context to identify the current action-outcome relationships. These findings are discussed with respect to the role of the hippocampus and its broader circuitry in the contextual modulation of goal-directed behaviour and the importance of hierarchical associations in flexible behaviour.

Keywords

DREADD; choice; context; goal-directed behaviour; rodent.

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