Dopamine and Norepinephrine Differentially Mediate the Exploration-Exploitation Tradeoff

Cathy Chen, Dana Mueller, Evan Knep, Becket Ebitz, Nicola M. Grissom

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Dopamine (DA) and norepinephrine (NE) have been repeatedly implicated in neuropsychiatric vulnerability, in part via their roles in mediating the decision-making processes. Although two neuromodulators share a synthesis pathway and are coactivated under states of arousal, they engage in distinct circuits and modulatory roles. However, the specific role of each neuromodulator in decision-making, in particular the exploration-exploitation tradeoff, remains unclear. Revealing how each neuromodulator contributes to exploration- exploitation tradeoff is important in guiding mechanistic hypotheses emerging from computational psychiatric approaches. To understand the differences and overlaps of the roles of these two catecholamine systems in regulating exploration, a direct comparison using the same dynamic decision-making task is needed. Here, we ranmale and femalemice in a restless two-armed bandit task, which encourages both exploration and exploitation. We systemically administered a nonselective DA antagonist (flupenthixol), a nonselective DA agonist (apomorphine), a NE beta-receptor antagonist (propranolol), and a NE beta-receptor agonist (isoproterenol) and examined changes in explorationwithin subjects across sessions.We found a bidirectionalmodulatory effect of dopamine on exploration. Increasing dopamine activity decreased exploration and decreasing dopamine activity increased exploration. The modulatory effect of beta-noradrenergic receptor activity on exploration was mediated by sex. Reinforcement learning model parameters suggested that dopamine modulation affected exploration via decision noise and norepinephrine modulation affected exploration via sensitivity to outcome. Together, these findings suggested that the mechanisms that govern the exploration-exploitation transition are sensitive to changes in both catecholamine functions and revealed differential roles for NE and DA in mediating exploration.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere1194232024
JournalJournal of Neuroscience
Volume44
Issue number44
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 30 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 the authors.

Keywords

  • catecholamine
  • decision-making
  • dopamine
  • exploration-exploitation tradeoff
  • norepinephrine
  • reinforcement learning

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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