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Research Aims

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Britt Lab for Neural Circuits, Motivation, and Reinforcement Learning

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The nucleus accumbens is a well-studied areaÌýof the forebrainÌýthat influences the eagerness with which animals seek out rewardsÌýas well as the pleasure theyÌýderiveÌýfrom consuming them. ÌýIt regulatesÌýmotivational processes andÌýreinforcement learning. Abberant signalling in the nucleus accumbens has been linked toÌýa varietyÌýof psychiatric conditions, including addiction, OCD, and schizophrenia. In general this structure is thought to integrateÌýcontextual, emotional, and motivational cues to initiate and coordinate reward seeking behaviour. Ìý

The Britt lab is currently trying to understandÌýwhat kind of information is encoded in the different inputs to the nucleus accumbens as well as how this information ultimately gets integrated into an action plan. We hopeÌýto establish exactly when each input to this integrative structure isÌýboth active andÌýconsequential to behaviour. To address these questionsÌýthe Britt lab studies rodents and usesÌýcalcium imaging techniques, such as fiber photometry, in combination with optogenetic manipulations. ÌýOur goal is to understand the causal relationship between neural circuit activity and behaviour with millisecond and pathway-specific precision.

The Britt lab is alsoÌýtrying to understand how pathway-specific neural circuit activity is altered in rodent models of psychopathology as well as how it changes in response to popular medications. Insights gained from this kind of neural circuit-mapping approach have already been used in the development of highly specific therapeutic interventions designed to improve the lives of patients afflicted by mental illness.

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