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The computational form of craving is a selective multiplication of economic value

Konova, Anna B; Louie, Kenway; Glimcher, Paul W
Craving is thought to be a specific desire state that biases choice toward the desired object, be it chocolate or drugs. A vast majority of people report having experienced craving of some kind. In its pathological form craving contributes to health outcomes in addiction and obesity. Yet despite its ubiquity and clinical relevance we still lack a basic neurocomputational understanding of craving. Here, using an instantaneous measure of subjective valuation and selective cue exposure, we identify a behavioral signature of a food craving-like state and advance a computational framework for understanding how this state might transform valuation to bias choice. We find desire induced by exposure to a specific high-calorie, high-fat/sugar snack good is expressed in subjects' momentary willingness to pay for this good. This effect is selective but not exclusive to the exposed good; rather, we find it generalizes to nonexposed goods in proportion to their subjective attribute similarity to the exposed ones. A second manipulation of reward size (number of snack units available for purchase) further suggested that a multiplicative gain mechanism supports the transformation of valuation during laboratory craving. These findings help explain how real-world food craving can result in behaviors inconsistent with preferences expressed in the absence of craving and open a path for the computational modeling of craving-like phenomena using a simple and repeatable experimental tool for assessing subjective states in economic terms.
PMCID:5910816
PMID: 29610355
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 3055482

TEMPORARY REMOVAL: Detecting stable individual differences in the functional organization of the human basal ganglia [Correction]

Garcia-Garcia, Manuel; Nikolaidis, Aki; Bellec, Pierre; Craddock, R Cameron; Cheung, Brian; Castellanos, Francisco X; Milham, Michael P
The publisher regrets that this article has been temporarily removed. A replacement will appear as soon as possible in which the reason for the removal of the article will be specified, or the article will be reinstated. The full Elsevier Policy on Article Withdrawal can be found at https://www.elsevier.com/about/our-business/policies/article-withdrawal.
PMID: 28739120
ISSN: 1095-9572
CID: 2654172

A role of GPR55 in the antiepileptic properties of cannabidiol (CBD) [Meeting Abstract]

Whalley, Benjamin J.; Bazelot, Michael; Rosenberg, Evan; Tsien, Richard
ISI:000453090801254
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 3561462

Expanding the Genetic Spectrum of Congenital Sensory and Autonomic Neuropathies with Whole Exome Sequencing [Meeting Abstract]

Palma, Jose-Alberto; Gao, Dadi; Slaugenhaupt, Susan; Norcliffe-Kaufmann, Lucy; Kaufmann, Horacio
ISI:000453090800015
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 3562082

Psychosis in Multiple System Atrophy [Meeting Abstract]

Palma, Jose-Alberto; Martinez, Jose; Norcliffe-Kaufmann, Lucy; Kaufmann, Horacio
ISI:000453090801109
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 3562022

Stimulus dependent diversity and stereotypy in the output of an olfactory functional unit

Arneodo, Ezequiel M; Penikis, Kristina B; Rabinowitz, Neil; Licata, Angela; Cichy, Annika; Zhang, Jingji; Bozza, Thomas; Rinberg, Dmitry
Olfactory inputs are organized in an array of functional units (glomeruli), each relaying information from sensory neurons expressing a given odorant receptor to a small population of output neurons, mitral/tufted (MT) cells. MT cells respond heterogeneously to odorants, and how the responses encode stimulus features is unknown. We recorded in awake mice responses from "sister" MT cells that receive input from a functionally characterized, genetically identified glomerulus, corresponding to a specific receptor (M72). Despite receiving similar inputs, sister MT cells exhibit temporally diverse, concentration-dependent, excitatory and inhibitory responses to most M72 ligands. In contrast, the strongest known ligand for M72 elicits temporally stereotyped, early excitatory responses in sister MT cells, consistent across a range of concentrations. Our data suggest that information about ligand affinity is encoded in the collective stereotypy or diversity of activity among sister MT cells within a glomerular functional unit in a concentration-tolerant manner.
PMCID:5890244
PMID: 29632302
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 3036772

The Chemist and the Architect

Trauner, Dirk
To imagine a structure and then express it in material form is one of the most satisfying of human activities. It is pervasive throughout the arts and crafts and it is one of the defining features of architecture. It is also at the heart of synthetic chemistry.
PMID: 29281154
ISSN: 1521-3773
CID: 2946442

Toward (-)-Enterocin: An Improved Cuprate Barbier Protocol To Overcome Strain and Sterical Hindrance

Rizzo, Antonio; Trauner, Dirk
An approach toward (-)-enterocin, an antibiotic isolated from Streptomyces hygroscopicus, is described. Its compact, heavily oxidized protoadamantane core represents a daunting challenge for an efficient synthesis. Convergent assembly of its 2-oxabicyclo[3.3.1]nonane core with a cuprate-mediated Barbier reaction is disclosed. Its functionalization to a suitable substrate for a biomimetic aldol to close the final ring of the natural product is evaluated.
PMID: 29553746
ISSN: 1523-7052
CID: 3000242

De Novo DNA Methylation: Marking the Path from Stem Cell to Neural Fate

Sawai, Ayana; Dasen, Jeremy S
DNA methylation is an epigenetic mark that plays pivotal roles in gene regulation, but its functions in neural fate decisions are poorly understood. In this issue of Cell Stem Cell, Ziller et al. (2018) show that the de novo methyltransferase Dnmt3a ensures efficient generation of motor neurons from stem cells.
PMID: 29625060
ISSN: 1875-9777
CID: 3026212

Development of Concurrent Retinotopic Maps in the Fly Motion Detection Circuit

Pinto-Teixeira, Filipe; Koo, Clara; Rossi, Anthony Michael; Neriec, Nathalie; Bertet, Claire; Li, Xin; Del-Valle-Rodriguez, Alberto; Desplan, Claude
Understanding how complex brain wiring is produced during development is a daunting challenge. In Drosophila, information from 800 retinal ommatidia is processed in distinct brain neuropiles, each subdivided into 800 matching retinotopic columns. The lobula plate comprises four T4 and four T5 neuronal subtypes. T4 neurons respond to bright edge motion, whereas T5 neurons respond to dark edge motion. Each is tuned to motion in one of the four cardinal directions, effectively establishing eight concurrent retinotopic maps to support wide-field motion. We discovered a mode of neurogenesis where two sequential Notch-dependent divisions of either a horizontal or a vertical progenitor produce matching sets of two T4 and two T5 neurons retinotopically coincident with pairwise opposite direction selectivity. We show that retinotopy is an emergent characteristic of this neurogenic program and derives directly from neuronal birth order. Our work illustrates how simple developmental rules can implement complex neural organization.
PMCID:5889347
PMID: 29576455
ISSN: 1097-4172
CID: 3125482