PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

When needs compete, love trumps thirst

2023-09-27
(Press-News.org) ITHACA, N.Y. – While many studies have investigated the neuroscience behind how an animal learns to achieve a goal, such as obtaining water when thirsty, none have understood how animals choose between several competing needs – until now.

A Cornell University-led study, published Sept. 27 in the journal Nature, used advanced techniques developed by researchers to track the brain’s dopamine reward system and found – for the first time ­– this system flexibly retunes toward the most important goal when faced with multiple competing needs.

In the study, when a lonely and thirsty male zebra finch encountered a female, his thirst waned and he instead focused his attention on her, a shift reflected in the dopamine system. 

Along with expanding our understanding of how dopamine neurons and pathways influence complex behavior, the finding may also inform the development of new artificial intelligence systems that mimic neural networks and dopamine reward systems.

“What we did that was new, to my knowledge, is that we were less interested in how an animal achieves a given objective and more interested in what happens when multiple objectives are on the table,” said Jesse Goldberg, associate professor of neurobiology and behavior and senior author of the study.

For more than a century, researchers have been studying relationships between dopamine and learning. Dopamine neurons fire in response to rewards meeting diverse needs such as hunger, thirst, loneliness, language, and song learning, to name a few. Upon receiving a reward, such as water when thirsty, dopamine neurons exhibit a burst in activity. All drugs of addiction work through this system, Goldberg said.

Researchers developed a technique using optical recording methods and an engineered virus. Genes in the virus drove the expression of fluorescent dopamine sensors, such that the tissue fluoresced in proportion to dopamine levels. Optical fibers placed in the brain were then able to measure dopamine levels rising and falling as birds sang songs, courted females, and drank water. While a previous system using electrodes let researchers measure dopamine signals for up to 30 minutes, this new method allowed them to measure neuron activity for up to four hours straight over weeks.

“It was a key technical advance that enabled the discovery,” Goldberg said.

In experiments, Goldberg and colleagues isolated male zebra finches, which are social animals, and also made them thirsty. The male had been trained to recognize that a flashing light meant it could peck a spout and get a drink, and when the bird was alone, the cue triggered both a large dopamine signal and water retrieval. But when the female was added to the cage, the male ignored the cue and the dopamine signal ceased.

“It’s kind of intuitive, but hadn’t explicitly been shown before, that courtship reduces the need for thirst,” Goldberg said. “And that’s important because in a complex and natural environment priorities change as new opportunities arise.” The shift was reflected in both the bird’s behavior and in the dopamine signal, he said.

Researchers say learning centers of the brain dynamically retune on moment by moment timescales, as an animal changes its priorities in response to new opportunities in the environment.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health.     

For additional information, see this Cornell Chronicle story.

-30-

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

NIH awards merit grant for nanofiber research targeting metastatic lung tumors

NIH awards merit grant for nanofiber research targeting metastatic lung tumors
2023-09-27
Dr. Vanessa Bellat, an assistant professor of chemistry in radiology and an affiliate of the Molecular Imaging Innovations Institute (MI3) at Weill Cornell Medicine, has been awarded a $2 million, four-year R37 MERIT grant from the National Cancer Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health. She will be developing a new therapeutic approach using nanofibers that selectively deliver drugs to the lungs to treat metastatic tumors and testing it in preclinical models. These fibers are made from peptide chains (building blocks that make up proteins) and have a unique 2-dimensional single ...

UTA research: Wildlife loss five times slower in protected areas

UTA research: Wildlife loss five times slower in protected areas
2023-09-27
Protecting large areas of land from human activity can help stem the tide of biodiversity loss, especially for vertebrates like amphibians, reptiles, mammals and birds, according to a new study in Nature. In particular, vertebrate population declines were five times slower in conservation areas compared to animals living in areas not protected from development or conversion to agricultural use. “Protected areas take us from a situation in which biodiversity is ebbing away to one where populations are at least close to stable,” said Luke Frishkoff, coauthor of the study and assistant professor of biology at The University of Texas at Arlington. ...

Milestone for novel atomic clock

Milestone for novel atomic clock
2023-09-27
An international research team has taken a decisive step toward a new generation of atomic clocks. At the European XFEL X-ray laser, the researchers have created a much more precise pulse generator based on the element scandium, which enables an accuracy of one second in 300 billion years – that is about a thousand times more precise than the current standard atomic clock based on caesium. The team presents its success in the journal Nature. Atomic clocks are currently the world’s ...

NSF backs Rice processor design, chip security research

NSF backs Rice processor design, chip security research
2023-09-27
HOUSTON – (Sept. 27, 2023) Rice University computer scientists have won two grants from the National Science Foundation to explore new information processing technologies and applications that combine seamlessly co-designed hardware and software to allow for more effective and efficient data stream analysis using pattern matching. Initiated by a Rice seed grant, the projects address the limitations of current computing infrastructure’s ability to process complex, unstructured data streams. A $1.2 million award will ...

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital unveils the Domino’s Village

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital unveils the Domino’s Village
2023-09-27
MEMPHIS, Tenn., Sept. 27, 2023 –  St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital® and Domino’s®, the largest pizza company in the world, today unveiled The Domino’s Village, a multi-million dollar housing facility for patients and their families. The six-story building that provides more than 307,000 square feet of residential and recreational space was funded by Domino’s as part of a 10-year, historic $100 million commitment to St. ...

U of M Medical School professor receives $3.5 million to develop Tanzanian reproductive health curriculum for those with disabilities

2023-09-27
MINNEAPOLIS/ST. PAUL (09/27/2023) — Kristen Mark, PhD, with the University of Minnesota Medical School, received a $3.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to enhance the quality of life for individuals with disabilities in Tanzania through a new project. The research team will train future healthcare providers like nurses, doctors and midwives with the skills and confidence to offer comprehensive sexual and reproductive healthcare services for people with disabilities. “Through doing this research, we will improve the lives of people with disabilities in Tanzania and build in-country capacity ...

How liver cells become scarring, and worse

How liver cells become scarring, and worse
2023-09-27
Hepatic fibrosis occurs when scar tissue replaces damaged cells in the liver. Over time, accumulating scarring distorts the liver, interferes with its blood supply and may progressively lead to worsening consequences, from cirrhosis to liver failure to liver cancer. In advanced cases, the only treatment is an organ transplant.     In a new paper, published online in the journal Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology, a team of scientists led by corresponding authors David A. Brenner, ...

Does form follow function? Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers advance understanding of why cell parts look the way they do

Does form follow function? Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers advance understanding of why cell parts look the way they do
2023-09-27
Scientists have long understood that parts of cells, called organelles, evolved to have certain shapes and sizes because their forms are closely related to how they function. Now, Johns Hopkins researchers have developed a bacteria-based tool to test whether, as the axiom goes, form follows function. The tool, which researchers say may someday have practical applications in treating illness, works by precisely targeting and dismantling the outer membrane surrounding organelles, and is being made freely available to other scientists. In an interesting twist, say the researchers, the tool may also be able to dismantle aggregated proteins in cells that ...

New study finds children of color and from low-income families are exposed to more toxic chemicals and experience greater harm

2023-09-27
  Media contacts:   Abby Manishor amanishor@burness.com  Allison Eatough aeatough@umd.edu   EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL   Wednesday, September 27, 2023 at 12:01am ET     New Study Finds Children of Color and from Low-Income Families Are Exposed to More Toxic Chemicals and Experience Greater Harm Landmark research review is the first to examine disparities in neurotoxic exposures and the harmful effects of those exposures on children by race, ethnicity, and economic status WASHINGTON, D.C., September 27, 2023—Children from families with low incomes and families of color are exposed to more neurotoxic ...

Community mobility and depressive symptoms during the pandemic

2023-09-27
About The Study: Depressive symptoms were greater in locales and times with diminished community mobility in this survey study with 192,000 respondents. Strategies to understand the potential public health consequences of pandemic responses are needed.  Authors: Roy H. Perlis, M.D., M.Sc., of Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, is the corresponding author.   To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.34945) Editor’s ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study finds Alzheimer's disease can be evaluated with brain stimulation

Cells that are not our own may unlock secrets about our health

Caring Cross and Boston Children’s Hospital collaborate to expand access to gene therapy for sickle cell disease and beta thalassemia

Mount Sinai review maps the path forward for cancer vaccines, highlighting promise of personalized and combination approaches

Illinois study: How a potential antibiotics ban could affect apple growers

UC Irvine and Jefferson Health researchers find differences between two causes of heart valve narrowing

Ancien DNA pushes back record of treponemal disease-causing bacteria by 3,000 years

Human penis size influences female attraction and male assessment of rivals

Scientists devise way to track space junk as it falls to earth

AI is already writing almost one-third of new software code

A 5,500-year-old genome rewrites the origins of syphilis

Tracking uncontrolled space debris reentry using sonic booms

Endogenous retroviruses promote early human zygotic development

Malicious AI swarms pose emergent threats to democracy

Progenitor cells in the brain constantly attempt to produce new myelin-producing brain cells

Quantum measurements with entangled atomic clouds

Mayo Clinic researchers use AI to predict patient falls based on core density in middle age

Moffitt study develops new tool to predict how cancer evolves

National Multiple Sclerosis Society awards Dr. Manuel A. Friese the 2025 Barancik Prize for Innovation in MS Research

PBM profits obscured by mergers and accounting practices, USC Schaeffer white paper shows

Breath carries clues to gut microbiome health

New study links altered cellular states to brain structure

Palaeontology: Ancient giant kangaroos could hop to it when they needed to

Decoded: How cancer cells protect themselves from the immune system

ISSCR develops roadmap to accelerate pluripotent stem cell-derived therapies to patients

New study shows gut microbiota directly regulates intestinal stem cell aging

Leading cancer deaths in people younger than 50 years

Rural hospital bypass by patients with commercial health insurance

Jumping giants: Fossils show giant prehistoric kangaroos could still hop

Missing Medicare data alters hospital penalties, study finds

[Press-News.org] When needs compete, love trumps thirst