Chronic Ethanol Exposure Produces Persistent Impairment in Cognitive Flexibility and Decision Signals in the Striatum

Kavli Affiliate: Daeyeol Lee and Patricia Janak

| Authors: Yifeng Cheng, Robin Magnard, Angela Langdon, Daeyeol Lee and Patricia H. Janak

| Summary:

Value-based decision-making relies on the striatum, where neural plasticity can be altered by chronic ethanol (EtOH) exposure, but the effects of such plasticity on striatal neural dynamics during decision-making remain unclear. This study investigated the long-term impacts of EtOH on reward-driven decision-making and striatal neurocomputations in male and female rats using a dynamic probabilistic reversal learning task. Following a prolonged withdrawal period, EtOH-exposed male rats exhibited deficits in adaptability and exploratory behavior, with a preference for value updating based on rewards rather than omissions. These behavioral changes were linked to altered neural encoding in the dorsomedial striatum (DMS), where EtOH increased outcome-related signals and decreased choice-related signals. In contrast, female rats showed minimal behavioral changes with distinct EtOH-evoked alterations of neural signals, revealing significant sex differences in the impact of chronic EtOH. Our findings underscore the profound impact of chronic EtOH exposure on adaptive decision-making, revealing enduring changes in neurocomputational processes in the striatum underlying cognitive deficits that differ by sex.

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