Monkey brains signal the desire to explore

Sep 04, 2009

Sticking with what you know often comes at the price of learning about more favorable alternatives.

Managing this trade-off is easy for many, but not for those with conditions such as Alzheimer's disease or obsessive-compulsive disorder who are trapped in simple routines.

Using in monkeys, Duke University Medical Center researchers are now able to predict when monkeys will switch from exploiting a known resource to exploring their options.

"Humans aren't the only animals who wonder if the grass is greener elsewhere, but it's hard to abandon what we know in hopes of finding something better," said John Pearson, Ph.D., research associate in the Duke Department of Neurobiology and lead author of a study published in this week's .

"Studies like this one help reveal how the brain weighs costs and benefits in making that kind of decision," Pearson said. "We suspect that such a fundamental question engages many areas of the brain, but this is one of the first studies to show how individual neurons can carry signals for these kinds of strategic decisions."

The researchers looked at how fired in a part of the brain known as the posterior cingulate cortex as the monkeys were offered a selection of rewards. Generally, these neurons fired more strongly when monkeys decided to explore new alternatives.

The monkeys started with four rewards to choose from, each a 200 microliter cup of juice. After that, the four targets began to slowly change in value, becoming larger or smaller. The monkeys were free to explore the other targets or stay with the initial target, whose value they knew for certain. had to select an option to learn its current value and integrate this information with their knowledge of the chances of getting more juice at a different target.

By studying the individual neurons, the researchers could predict which strategy the monkey would employ.

"These data are interesting from a human health perspective, because the posterior cingulate cortex is the most metabolically active part of the brain when we are daydreaming or thinking to ourselves, and it is also one of the first parts of the brain to show damage in Alzheimer's disease," said Michael Platt, Ph.D., professor of neurobiology and evolutionary anthropology at Duke and senior author of the study.

"People with Alzheimer's become set in their ways and don't explore as much, which may be because this part of the brain is damaged," Platt said. "Likewise, in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder, they can become fixed on certain activities or patterns of activity and can't disengage from them, which may also relate to changes in this part of the brain that renders them mentally unable to switch gears between exploring and exploiting."

More research is needed to learn about how this part of the functions, which might be crucial to the flexible adaptation of strategy in response to changing environments, Pearson said.

Source: Duke University Medical Center (news : web)

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otto1923
not rated yet Sep 04, 2009
Mmmmmm monkey brains. Yum.
docknowledge
1 / 5 (1) Sep 05, 2009
Yeah, but. Indulge in adventure? Sure, you get a shot at something much better.

But also take a chance of encountering something much worse.

That's why evolution selects for people who follow the guidance of their peers, who avoid anything novel, and who act by rote.
otto1923
not rated yet Sep 05, 2009
That's why evolution selects for people who follow the guidance of their peers, who avoid anything novel, and who act by rote.
Evolution? The Culture selects for compliance. It's called domestication, the purposeful husbanding of the human species.
docknowledge
1 / 5 (1) Sep 05, 2009
I'd see "culture" as a part of evolution. If you can give a set of values to your offspring that make life worth living (maybe when it isn't really that appealing) that's got survival value.
otto1923
not rated yet Sep 05, 2009
I'm talking about a Culture designed to convince people to live happily with less than their parents had as populations swell. A Culture which can compel people to suffer, fight, and die for any purpose it sees fit. A benevolent culture with one Purpose- to preserve the human race and the vast store of knowledge it has accrued despite it's inevitable urge to self-destruct. This Culture is not a natural phenomenon like evolution but we would nevertheless expect to see it's emergence in any civilization which still exists at our stage of development.
otto1923
not rated yet Sep 05, 2009
People (animals) do not necessarily seek adventure, that is, new niches to occupy, unless compelled to do so. Why leave the ancestral hunting ground if there is security, food and room enough to make babies without limit? Our 'urge to diverge' comes from physical limits to our need to procreate. 

Our genes tell us what to do. It is the perceived limitation to procreate which causes us to fight and destroy, and to wander when necessary. Like any animal we are peaceful until we are cornered or our families are threatened; we can then be expected to fight like hell.
otto1923
not rated yet Sep 05, 2009
I don't know, testing monkeys over this sort of thing when they are already preoccupied with getting out of their cages, if they're not already broken and deranged, might produce mixed results?

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