The habenula: from stress evasion to value-based decision-making

O Hikosaka - Nature reviews neuroscience, 2010 - nature.com
Nature reviews neuroscience, 2010nature.com
Surviving in a world with hidden rewards and dangers requires choosing the appropriate
behaviours. Recent discoveries indicate that the habenula plays a prominent part in such
behavioural choice through its effects on neuromodulator systems, in particular the
dopamine and serotonin systems. By inhibiting dopamine-releasing neurons, habenula
activation leads to the suppression of motor behaviour when an animal fails to obtain a
reward or anticipates an aversive outcome. Moreover, the habenula is involved in …
Abstract
Surviving in a world with hidden rewards and dangers requires choosing the appropriate behaviours. Recent discoveries indicate that the habenula plays a prominent part in such behavioural choice through its effects on neuromodulator systems, in particular the dopamine and serotonin systems. By inhibiting dopamine-releasing neurons, habenula activation leads to the suppression of motor behaviour when an animal fails to obtain a reward or anticipates an aversive outcome. Moreover, the habenula is involved in behavioural responses to pain, stress, anxiety, sleep and reward, and its dysfunction is associated with depression, schizophrenia and drug-induced psychosis. As a highly conserved structure in the brain, the habenula provides a fundamental mechanism for both survival and decision-making.
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