(a) Schematic diagram of synaptic and behavioral timescales in reward-related learning. During Exploration, the activity-dependent modification of synaptic strength due to spike timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) depends on the coordinated spiking between presynaptic and postsynaptic neurons on a millisecond time scale. STDP develops gradually on a scale of minutes. Increased cholinergic tone (ACh) during Exploration facilitates synaptic depression. When Reward, signaled via dopamine (DA), follows Exploration with a Delay of seconds to minutes, synaptic depression is converted into potentiation. (b) Computational model. (bi) Symmetric STDP learning windows incorporated in the model, where acetylcholine biases STDP toward synaptic depression, while subsequent application of dopamine converts this depression into potentiation. (bii) The position of the agent in the field, x(t), is coded by place cells and its moves are determined by the activity of action neurons. STDP is implemented in the feed-forward connections between place cells and action neurons. Place cells become active with the proximity of the agent (active neurons in red: the darker, the higher their firing rate). Place cells are connected to action neurons through excitatory synapses (wfeed: the darker, the stronger the connection). Action neurons are connected with each other: recurrent synaptic weights (wlat) are excitatory (red) when action neurons have similar tuning, or inhibitory (blue) otherwise. Thus, the activation of action neurons is dependent on both the feed-forward and recurrent connections. (biii) Each action neuron j codes for a different direction aj (large arrow’s direction) and has a different firing rate ρj (large arrow’s color: the darker, the higher the firing rate). The action to take a(t) (black arrow) is the average of all directions, weighted by their respective firing rate. (biv) The agent takes action a(t). Therefore, it moves to x(t + Δt) = x(t) + a(t).
DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.27756.012