Publications by authors named "Evan Knep"

Article Synopsis
  • Dopamine (DA) and norepinephrine (NE) play distinct but overlapping roles in decision-making processes, particularly in the exploration-exploitation tradeoff, where individuals balance trying new options versus sticking with known rewards.
  • A study involving male and female mice used a two-armed bandit task to observe how various drugs affecting DA and NE influenced exploration behavior, revealing that increasing DA decreased exploration while decreasing DA had the opposite effect.
  • The findings indicate that DA and NE have different mechanisms in regulating exploration, with DA affecting decision noise and NE impacting sensitivity to outcomes, highlighting the complex interplay between these neuromodulators in decision-making.
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The catecholamines dopamine (DA) and norepinephrine (NE) have been repeatedly implicated in neuropsychiatric vulnerability, in part via their roles in mediating the decision making processes. Although the two neuromodulators share a synthesis pathway and are co-activated under states of arousal, they engage in distinct circuits and roles in modulating neural activity across the brain. However, in the computational neuroscience literature, they have been assigned similar roles in modulating the latent cognitive processes of decision making, in particular the exploration-exploitation tradeoff.

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Sex-based modulation of cognitive processes could set the stage for individual differences in vulnerability to neuropsychiatric disorders. While value-based decision making processes in particular have been proposed to be influenced by sex differences, the overall correct performance in decision making tasks often show variable or minimal differences across sexes. Computational tools allow us to uncover latent variables that define different decision making approaches, even in animals with similar correct performance.

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