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Tectonigral projections in the primate: a pathway for pre-attentive sensory input to midbrain dopaminergic neurons
Authors:Paul J. May  John G. McHaffie  Terrence R. Stanford  Huai Jiang  M. Gabriela Costello  Veronique Coizet  Lauren M. Hayes  Suzanne N. Haber   Peter Redgrave
Affiliation:Departments of Anatomy, Ophthalmology &Neurology, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS, USA;
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA;
Department of Psychology, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK;
Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA
Abstract:Much of the evidence linking the short-latency phasic signaling of midbrain dopaminergic neurons with reward-prediction errors used in learning and habit formation comes from recording the visual responses of monkey dopaminergic neurons. However, the information encoded by dopaminergic neuron activity is constrained by the qualities of the afferent visual signals made available to these cells. Recent evidence from rats and cats indicates the primary source of this visual input originates subcortically, via a direct tectonigral projection. The present anatomical study sought to establish whether a direct tectonigral projection is a significant feature of the primate brain. Injections of anterograde tracers into the superior colliculus of macaque monkeys labelled terminal arbors throughout the substantia nigra, with the densest terminations in the dorsal tier. Labelled boutons were found in close association (possibly indicative of synaptic contact) with ventral midbrain neurons staining positively for the dopaminergic marker tyrosine hydroxylase. Injections of retrograde tracer confined to the macaque substantia nigra retrogradely labelled small- to medium-sized neurons in the intermediate and deep layers of the superior colliculus. Together, these data indicate that a direct tectonigral projection is also a feature of the monkey brain, and therefore likely to have been conserved throughout mammalian evolution. Insofar as the superior colliculus is configured to detect unpredicted, biologically salient, sensory events, it may be safer to regard the phasic responses of midbrain dopaminergic neurons as 'sensory prediction errors' rather than 'reward prediction errors', in which case dopamine-based theories of reinforcement learning will require revision.
Keywords:basal ganglia    dopamine    oculomotor    reward    superior colliculus
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