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result(s) for
"Croote, Denise E."
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The hippocampus dissociates present from past and future goals
2024
Our brain adeptly navigates goals across time frames, distinguishing between urgent needs and those of the past or future. The hippocampus is a region known for supporting mental time travel and organizing information along its longitudinal axis, transitioning from detailed posterior representations to generalized anterior ones. This study investigates the role of the hippocampus in distinguishing goals over time: whether the hippocampus encodes time regardless of detail or abstraction, and whether the hippocampus preferentially activates its anterior region for temporally distant goals (past and future) and its posterior region for immediate goals. We use a space-themed experiment with 7T functional MRI on 31 participants to examine how the hippocampus encodes the temporal distance of goals. During a simulated Mars mission, we find that the hippocampus tracks goals solely by temporal proximity. We show that past and future goals activate the left anterior hippocampus, while current goals engage the left posterior hippocampus. This suggests that the hippocampus maps goals using timestamps, extending its long axis system to include temporal goal organization.
It is unclear how the brain prioritizes goals. Here, the authors show that the mental timestamps assigned to goals guide their dissociation along the anterior-posterior parts of the hippocampus, extending its long axis system to include temporal goal organization.
Journal Article
Author Correction: Midbrain circuit regulation of individual alcohol drinking behaviors in mice
by
Zhang, Hongxing
,
Montgomery, Sarah
,
Han, Ming-Hu
in
631/378/1689/5
,
631/378/1697/2603
,
631/378/3920
2018
The original version of this Article contained an error in the spelling of the author Scott Edwards, which was incorrectly given as Scott Edward. This has now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.
Journal Article
Voluntary wheel running promotes resilience to chronic social defeat stress in mice: a role for nucleus accumbens ΔFosB
by
Takahashi, Hirokazu
,
Mul, Joram D
,
Nestler, Eric J
in
Avoidance behavior
,
Cyclic AMP response element-binding protein
,
Exercise
2018
Elucidating mechanisms by which physical exercise promotes resilience, the brain’s ability to cope with prolonged stress exposure while maintaining normal psychological functioning, is a major research challenge given the high prevalence of stress-related mental disorders, including major depressive disorder. Chronic voluntary wheel running (VWR), a rodent model that mimics aspects of human physical exercise, induces the transcription factor ΔFosB in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), a key reward-related brain area. ΔFosB expression in NAc modulates stress susceptibility. Here, we explored whether VWR induction of NAc ΔFosB promotes resilience to chronic social defeat stress (CSDS). Male young-adult C57BL/6J mice were single housed for up to 21 d with or without running wheels and then subjected to 10 d of CSDS. Stress-exposed sedentary mice developed a depressive-like state, characterized by anhedonia and social avoidance, whereas stress-exposed mice that had been wheel running showed resilience. Functional inhibition of NAc ΔFosB during VWR, by viral-mediated overexpression of a transcriptionally inactive JunD mutant, reinstated susceptibility to CSDS. Within the NAc, VWR induction of ΔFosB was CREB-dependent, associated with altered dendritic morphology, and medium spiny neuron (MSN) subtype specific in the NAc core and shell subregions. Finally, when mice performed VWR following the onset of CSDS-induced social avoidance, VWR normalized such behavior. These data indicate that VWR promoted resilience to CSDS, and suggest that sustained induction of ΔFosB in the NAc underlies, at least in part, the stress resilience mediated by VWR. These findings provide a potential framework for the development of treatments for stress-associated mental illnesses based on physical exercise.
Journal Article
Delay discounting decisions are linked to temporal distance representations of world events across cultures
2020
Delay discounting describes the phenomenon whereby the subjective value of a reward declines as the time until its receipt increases. Individuals differ in the subjective value that they assign to future rewards, yet, the components feeding into this appraisal of value remain unclear. We examined whether temporal psychological distance, i.e. the closeness one feels to the past and future, is one such component. English speakers in the USA and Mandarin speakers in China completed a delay discounting task and organized past and future world events on a canvas according to their representation of the event’s temporal position relative to themselves. Previous work has identified linguistic and cultural differences in time conception between these populations, thus, we hypothesized that this sample would display the variability necessary to probe whether temporal psychological distance plays a role in reward valuation. We found that English speakers employed horizontal, linear representations of world events, while Mandarin speakers used more two-dimensional, circular representations. Across cultures, individuals who represented the future as more distant discounted future rewards more strongly. Distance representations of past events, however, were associated with discounting behaviors selectively in Mandarin speakers. This suggests that temporal psychological distance plays a fundamental role in farsighted decision-making.
Journal Article
Midbrain circuit regulation of individual alcohol drinking behaviors in mice
by
Zhang, Hongxing
,
Montgomery, Sarah
,
Han, Ming-Hu
in
631/378/1689/5
,
631/378/1697/2603
,
631/378/3920
2017
Alcohol-use disorder (AUD) is the most prevalent substance-use disorder worldwide. There is substantial individual variability in alcohol drinking behaviors in the population, the neural circuit mechanisms of which remain elusive. Utilizing in vivo electrophysiological techniques, we find that low alcohol drinking (LAD) mice have dramatically higher ventral tegmental area (VTA) dopamine neuron firing and burst activity. Unexpectedly, VTA dopamine neuron activity in high alcohol drinking (HAD) mice does not differ from alcohol naive mice. Optogenetically enhancing VTA dopamine neuron burst activity in HAD mice decreases alcohol drinking behaviors. Circuit-specific recordings reveal that spontaneous activity of nucleus accumbens-projecting VTA (VTA-NAc) neurons is selectively higher in LAD mice. Specifically activating this projection is sufficient to reduce alcohol consumption in HAD mice. Furthermore, we uncover ionic and cellular mechanisms that suggest unique neuroadaptations between the alcohol drinking groups. Together, these data identify a neural circuit responsible for individual alcohol drinking behaviors.
Mice exposed to a two-bottle alcohol choice paradigm can be divided into high and low drinking groups. Here, the authors show that stimulating VTA neurons to induce higher phasic activity patterns that are observed in low alcohol drinking mice, suppresses alcohol drinking in mice that are high alcohol drinking.
Journal Article
Hippocampal timestamp for goals
2023
Our brain must manage multiple goals that differ in their temporal proximity. Some goals require immediate attention, while others have already been accomplished, or will be relevant later in time. Here, we examined how the hippocampus represents the temporal distance to different goals using a novel space-themed paradigm during 7T functional MRI (n=31). The hippocampus has an established role in mental time travel and a system in place to stratify information along its longitudinal axis on the basis of representational granularity. Previous work has documented a functional transformation from fine-grained, detail rich representations in the posterior hippocampus to coarse, gist-like representations in the anterior hippocampus. We tested whether the hippocampus uses this long axis system to dissociate goals based upon their temporal distance from the present. We hypothesized that the hippocampus would distinguish goals relevant for ones' current needs from those that are removed in time along the long axis, with temporally removed past and future goals eliciting increasingly anterior activation. We sent participants on a mission to Mars where they had to track goals that differed in when they needed to be accomplished. We observed a long-axis dissociation, where temporally removed past and future goals activated the left anterior hippocampus and current goals activated the left posterior hippocampus. Altogether, this study demonstrates that the timestamp attached to a goal is a key driver in where the goal is represented in the hippocampus. This work extends the scope of the hippocampus' long axis system to the goal-mapping domain.
Journal Article
The Behavioral and Neural Correlates of Time Representation
2021
Time is highly abstract in that it cannot be seen, touched, heard, or sensed directly, yet it is an integral component of several cognitive processes. Time plays a critical role in decision-making, specifically when making choices regarding the future, and in future planning, when tracking goals that differ in when they need to be accomplished. Inherent in these cognitive acts is a mental representation of time. Substantial literature suggests that individuals’ subjective representations of time do not always equate to the objective passage of time. Sunday might feel as though it is right around the corner for some individuals, while for others Sunday might feel as though it is light years away. This feeling of the perceived closeness of the past and future is formally defined as temporal psychological distance. We demonstrate that individuals differ in the temporal distance with which they represent the same past and future world events, and that representations of time are shaped by ones’ culture. Temporal distance representations in turn influence farsighted decisions, where individuals who view the future as further from themselves exhibit less patience for delayed rewards. Temporal distance representations also drive where personal goals are mapped in the brain. The left medial hippocampus represents personal goals that are relevant for ones’ current needs (proximal in time), while the left anterior hippocampus represents goals that are removed in time (i.e., goals that have already been completed in the past or have yet to be accomplished in the future). This research demonstrates that time is elastic and is malleable to cultural influences. Internal representations of time are important for guiding farsighted decisions involving future rewards. Further, the timestamps attached to goals guide how the goals are processed and where they are represented in the hippocampus. This work deepens our understanding of time representation on a psychological and neural level. Our studies provide the foundation for future work exploring the role of time representation in other facets of human cognition, and for research investigating altered representations of time across psychiatric disorders.
Dissertation