Physiological need states - hunger, thirst, and more
How do we prioritize one need over another? What are the cortical representations that underlie this prioritization? We use physiological needs to address these questions.
Physiological need states, such as hunger and thirst, produce powerful motivations to obtain specific goals, such as food or water. Yet it remains unknown how the specificity of need-driven goal-seeking is achieved. What are the undelying cortical representations?
What drives water-seeking, but not food-seeking, when thirsty? How are specific physiological need states represented, and how are these representations then integrated with learned information about the external environment to facilitate fulfillment of the need?
Human neuroimaging studies implicate insular cortex as a unique site that performs this integration. We therefore focus on how insular cortex activity patterns guide decisions that will restore bodily homeostasis.
We developed a novel microprism-based experimental preparation that enables imaging intact insular cortex in awake behaving mice at cellular and subcellular resolution over months. We combine this approach with manipulations of molecularly-defined hypothalamic and brainstem neurons that drive hunger or thirst to uncover neural circuit mechanisms by which hunger and thirst enhance cortical responses to food- and water-predicting cues. We are using this approach to elucidate how the specificity of need-driven goal-seeking is achieved.