ePoster

NEUROMODULATORY CONTRIBUTIONS TO FLEXIBLE DECISION-MAKING REVEALED IN A STANDARDIZED BEHAVIORAL TASK

Laura Freitas-Silvaand 11 co-authors

Champalimaud Foundation

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS01-07AM-315

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS01-07AM-315

Poster preview

NEUROMODULATORY CONTRIBUTIONS TO FLEXIBLE DECISION-MAKING REVEALED IN A STANDARDIZED BEHAVIORAL TASK poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS01-07AM-315

Abstract


Multi-panel figure showing fiber photometry recordings from five neuromodulatory brain regions in mice during a behavioral task. The figure is organized in rows by brain region (color-coded): dopamine from ventral tegmental area (red) and substantia nigra pars compacta (red), serotonin from dorsal raphe nucleus (purple), norepinephrine from locus coeruleus (blue), and acetylcholine from basal forebrain (green). Each row contains brain diagrams showing recording locations, followed by activity traces aligned to stimulus onset (left columns) and feedback outcome (right columns). Traces show neural activity (delta F/F) over time for different stimulus contrasts and trial outcomes. Line plots on the right show mean responses across contrast levels, comparing correct versus incorrect trials and contralateral versus ipsilateral stimuli. Statistical results from linear mixed models are displayed, showing significant effects of side, feedback, and contrast on neural responses. Key findings highlighted at bottom: all neuromodulators show increased activity upon stimulus onset and higher activity after positive outcomes. Data represents 4-6 mice per region across 36-105 recording sessions.Decision-making is a dynamic process that evolves according to the animal’s learning and internal physiological states. Recent electrophysiological data from the International Brain Laboratory (IBL) revealed a widespread network of brain regions in proficient mice performing a visual two-alterative forced choice task, providing a high-resolution snapshot of the decision process. Here, we complement this static picture by correlating the activity of neuromodulatory (NM) nuclei, compact neural populations delivering specialized signaling molecules across the brain network, with flexible decision-making behavior. Some of these molecules like dopamine, serotonin, norepinephrine, and acetylcholine, play a prominent role in flexible decision-making by signaling reward prediction, uncertainty, attention, and behavioral arousal. However, their individual contributions remain unclear, as they are typically studied in isolation across diverse decision-making protocols. We built upon the standardized, reproducible behavioral framework of the IBL, using fiber photometry to record bulk calcium activity via GCaMP6f from genetically-targeted NM populations in five prominent nuclei across ~106 trials in >50 mice. We find unique and overlapping signaling patterns during three distinct sub-trial events: pre-trial waiting, stimulus onset, and feedback delivery. We further correlate variability in this signaling to psychometric parameters and behavioral co-variates to provide a comprehensive picture of the neuromodulatory signals underlying shifts in decision-making. We present these results alongside an open-access dataset and an open-source Python toolbox for pre-processing and quality control. Our work aims to disentangle the specific contributions of these NM systems to decision-making, providing a better understanding of how they act in concert to modulate brain-wide decision processes.

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