Unilateral medial frontal cortex lesions cause a cognitive decision-making deficit in rats.

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Title: Unilateral medial frontal cortex lesions cause a cognitive decision-making deficit in rats.
Authors: Croxson, Paula L., Walton, Mark E., Boorman, Erie D., Rushworth, Matthew F. S., Bannerman, David M.
Source: European Journal of Neuroscience. Dec2014, Vol. 40 Issue 12, p3757-3765. 9p.
Subjects: Cognition disorders, Frontal lobe, Decision making, Reward (Psychology), Movement disorders, Dopaminergic mechanisms, Mesencephalon, Diseases
Abstract: The medial frontal cortex ( MFC) is critical for cost-benefit decision-making. Generally, cognitive and reward-based behaviour in rodents is not thought to be lateralised within the brain. In this study, however, we demonstrate that rats with unilateral MFC lesions show a profound change in decision-making on an effort-based decision-making task. Furthermore, unilateral MFC lesions have a greater effect when the rat has to choose to put in more effort for a higher reward when it is on the contralateral side of space to the lesion. Importantly, this could not be explained by motor impairments as these animals did not show a turning bias in separate experiments. In contrast, rats with unilateral dopaminergic midbrain lesions did exhibit a motoric turning bias, but were unimpaired on the effort-based decision-making task. This rare example of a cognitive deficit caused by a unilateral cortical lesion in the rat brain indicates that the MFC may have a specialised and lateralised role in evaluating the costs and benefits of actions directed to specific spatial locations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection
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Abstract:The medial frontal cortex ( MFC) is critical for cost-benefit decision-making. Generally, cognitive and reward-based behaviour in rodents is not thought to be lateralised within the brain. In this study, however, we demonstrate that rats with unilateral MFC lesions show a profound change in decision-making on an effort-based decision-making task. Furthermore, unilateral MFC lesions have a greater effect when the rat has to choose to put in more effort for a higher reward when it is on the contralateral side of space to the lesion. Importantly, this could not be explained by motor impairments as these animals did not show a turning bias in separate experiments. In contrast, rats with unilateral dopaminergic midbrain lesions did exhibit a motoric turning bias, but were unimpaired on the effort-based decision-making task. This rare example of a cognitive deficit caused by a unilateral cortical lesion in the rat brain indicates that the MFC may have a specialised and lateralised role in evaluating the costs and benefits of actions directed to specific spatial locations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
ISSN:0953816X
DOI:10.1111/ejn.12751