Neuronal mechanism of the encoding of socially familiar faces in the striatum tail

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2023 May 10:2023.05.10.540108. doi: 10.1101/2023.05.10.540108.

Abstract

Although we can quickly locate a familiar person even in a crowd, the underlying neuronal mechanism remains unclear. Recently, we found that the striatum tail (STRt), which is part of the basal ganglia, is sensitive to long-term reward history. Here, we show that long-term value-coding neurons are involved in the detection of socially familiar faces. Many STRt neurons respond to facial images, especially to those of socially familiar persons. Additionally, we found that these face-responsive neurons also encode the stable values of many objects based on long-term reward experiences. Interestingly, the strength of neuronal modulation of social familiarity bias (familiar or unfamiliar) and object value bias (high-valued or low-valued) were positively correlated. These results suggest that both social familiarity and stable object-value information are mediated by a common neuronal mechanism. This mechanism may contribute to the rapid detection of familiar faces in real-world contexts.

Publication types

  • Preprint

Grants and funding

Intramural Research Program at the National Institutes of Health, National Eye Institute (O.H.)