Elsevier

Experimental Neurology

Volume 53, Issue 2, November 1976, Pages 508-519
Experimental Neurology

Modulation during learning of the responses of neurons in the lateral hypothalamus to the sight of food

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Abstract

Recordings were made from single neurons in the lateral hypothalamus and substantia innominata of the rhesus and squirrel monkey during feeding. A population of these neurons which altered their firing rates while the monkeys looked at food but not at nonfood objects was investigated. Because the responses of these neurons must have been affected by the previous experience of the animals, the activity of the neurons was measured during tasks in which the monkeys learned whether or not objects which they saw were associated with food. During visual discrimination tests these neurons came to respond when the monkey saw one stimulus associated with food (e.g., a black syringe from which the animal was fed glucose), but not when the monkey saw a different stimulus which was not associated with food (e.g., a white syringe from which the animal was offered saline). During extinction tests these units ceased to respond when the monkey saw a visual stimulus such as a peanut if the peanut was repeatedly not given to the monkey to eat. The learning or extinction behavior approximately paralleled the response of the neurons.

The findings that the neurons in the lateral hypothalamus and substantia innominata respond when a monkey is shown food only if he is hungry, and as shown here, if as a result of learning the visual stimulus signifies food, provide information on a part of the brain which may be involved in feeding. The findings are consistent with other data which suggest that the responses of these neurons are involved in the autonomic and/or behavioral reactions of the animal to the sight of food.

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We thank Dr. A. M. Sanguinetti, Mr. I. Hughes, and Mrs. A. Hammond for their assistance. Dr. F. Mora was supported by a British Council Fellowship. This work was supported by the Medical Research Council. Part of this work was presented to the First International Conference on Brain-Stimulation Reward held in Beerse, Belgium, April 1975.

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