Most rats prefer gambling opportunities featuring win-paired cues that drive risky choice: Synergistic interactions between choice of and choice during the cued rat gambling task.

Brain and neuroscience advances Pub Date : 2025-07-04 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23982128251352235
Claire A Hales, Kelly M Hrelja, Sapeeda Ansary, Erin Chong, Brittney Russell, Catharine A Winstanley
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Abstract

Win-paired cues drive maladaptive decision-making in laboratory-based gambling tasks. However, humans prefer these cued games that facilitate gambling addiction. Whether rats prefer tasks that employ win-paired cues is unknown, yet this has consequences for the validity of using rodent models to investigate problem gambling. Here, we allowed rats to choose on a trial-by-trial basis whether to work for cued or uncued rewards on the rat gambling task. We also performed computational modelling to investigate individual differences in decision-making strategies. Rats could be grouped based on preference for task type, which became more pronounced across training, or preference for risky options, as is standard for the rat gambling task. Risk-preferring rats increasingly preferred the cued task over time. Decision-making was marginally riskier on cued trials, particularly in risk-preferring rats, but this was independent of task preference. Pairing of rewards with audiovisual cues accelerated response times and enhanced impulsivity in both cue- and risk-preferring rats. Cued wins also resulted in greater post-reinforcement pauses in risk-preferring animals only. Diffusion model analyses revealed optimal decision-makers have longer non-decision times before risky or impulsive choices, yet this is absent in risk-preferring animals. As such, lapses in cognitive control could be responsible for maladaptive trial outcomes in optimal, but not risk-preferring, rats. Collectively, these data support the use of high-risk preference at baseline as a proxy for vulnerability to problem gambling. Furthermore, diverse computational mechanisms could be responsible for the negative impact of win-paired cues on gambling-like behaviour in at-risk versus resilient individuals.

大多数大鼠更喜欢赌博机会,以赢对提示驱动风险选择:在提示大鼠赌博任务中,选择和选择之间的协同作用。
在基于实验室的赌博任务中,获胜配对线索导致了不适应决策。然而,人类更喜欢这些促使赌博成瘾的暗示游戏。大鼠是否更喜欢使用双赢线索的任务尚不清楚,但这对使用啮齿动物模型研究问题赌博的有效性产生了影响。在这里,我们允许大鼠在逐个试验的基础上选择是为有线索的奖励工作还是为没有线索的奖励工作。我们还进行了计算模型来研究决策策略的个体差异。老鼠可以根据对任务类型的偏好进行分组,这在训练中变得更加明显,或者对风险选择的偏好,这是老鼠赌博任务的标准。随着时间的推移,偏好冒险的老鼠越来越喜欢提示任务。在提示试验中,决策风险略高,尤其是在偏好风险的大鼠中,但这与任务偏好无关。与视听线索配对的奖励加速了线索和风险偏好大鼠的反应时间和增强了冲动。暗示的胜利也只会在偏好风险的动物中导致更大的强化后停顿。扩散模型分析显示,最优决策者在做出冒险或冲动的选择之前有更长的非决策时间,而这在偏好风险的动物中是不存在的。因此,认知控制的缺失可能是导致最优而不是偏好风险的大鼠适应不良试验结果的原因。总的来说,这些数据支持在基线上使用高风险偏好作为对问题赌博的脆弱性的代理。此外,不同的计算机制可能会导致赢对线索对风险个体与弹性个体的赌博行为产生负面影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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