Vincent Costa
- Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor
- (404) 727-6593
- vincent.d.costa@emory.edu
Overview
Our research focuses on using computational and systems neuroscience approaches to understand the function of motivational neural circuits in emotion, cognition, and disease. Our lab investigates how neural circuits that underwent evolutionary expansion in primates help monkeys and humans learn that the things they see and do have affective consequences. We want to understand the function of these circuits underlying motivated cognition in enough detail that we can predict whether actions or objects will elicit appetitive or aversive responses and the strength of those responses. Learning to approach or avoid objects or actions based on experience is called reinforcement learning. One advantage to studying reinforcement learning is that the problems and solutions it encompasses are computationally tractable. This allows us to utilize the same tasks and algorithms to study learning and decision making in humans and monkeys with few modifications and at a variety of levels. Using the rhesus macaque brain as a model system, our team combines multiple techniques including neurophysiology, reversible methods for perturbing neural circuits, and molecular approaches to neuroanatomy, to build an understanding about cell-type specific and circuit level control of reinforcement learning. We also use tools and theories from reinforcement learning to forward translate discoveries about the neural bases of reinforcement learning in the monkey into healthy humans and psychiatric populations. These efforts identify which neural mechanisms are relevant across primates. They also ensure that our research involving nonhuman primates is building a translational bridge, towards a quantitative understanding of human emotions and improved treatments for psychiatric disorders.
Research
Publications
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Synthetic Serum Markers Enable Noninvasive Monitoring of Gene Expression in Primate Brains.
06/06/2025 Authors: Lee S; Romac MD; Watanabe S; Chernov M; Li H; Raisley E; Szablowski JO; Costa VD -
Recurrent activity propagates through labile ensembles in macaque dorsolateral prefrontal microcircuits.
Curr Biol Volume: 35 Page(s): 431 - 443.e4
01/20/2025 Authors: Nolan SO; Melugin PR; Erickson KR; Adams WR; Farahbakhsh ZZ; Mcgonigle CE; Kwon MH; Costa VD; Hackett TA; Cuzon Carlson VC -
Transcriptomic landscape of mammalian ventral pallidum at single-cell resolution.
Sci Adv Volume: 10 Page(s): eadq6017
12/13/2024 Authors: Yang L; Fang LZ; Lynch MR; Xu CS; Hahm HJ; Zhang Y; Heitmeier MR; Costa VD; Samineni VK; Creed MC -
Transcriptomic diversity of amygdalar subdivisions across humans and nonhuman primates.
bioRxiv
10/18/2024 Authors: Totty MS; Juanes RC; Bach SV; Ameur LB; Valentine MR; Simons E; Romac M; Trinh H; Henderson K; Del Rosario I -
Contribution of amygdala to dynamic model arbitration under uncertainty.
bioRxiv
09/15/2024 Authors: Woo JH; Costa VD; Taswell CA; Rothenhoefer KM; Averbeck BB; Soltani A -
Lesions to the mediodorsal thalamus, but not orbitofrontal cortex, enhance volatility beliefs linked to paranoia.
Cell Rep Volume: 43 Page(s): 114355
06/25/2024 Authors: Suthaharan P; Thompson SL; Rossi-Goldthorpe RA; Rudebeck PH; Walton ME; Chakraborty S; Noonan MP; Costa VD; Murray EA; Mathys CD -
Motor System-Dependent Effects of Amygdala and Ventral Striatum Lesions on Explore-Exploit Behaviors.
J Neurosci Volume: 44
01/31/2024 Authors: Giarrocco F; Costa VD; Basile BM; Pujara MS; Murray EA; Averbeck BB -
The amygdala is not necessary for the familiarity aspect of recognition memory.
Nat Commun Volume: 14 Page(s): 8109
12/07/2023 Authors: Basile BM; Costa VD; Schafroth JL; Karaskiewicz CL; Lucas DR; Murray EA -
A Computational Model Reveals Learning Dynamics During Interpretation Bias Training With Clinical Applications.
Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging Volume: 8 Page(s): 1033 - 1040
10/01/2023 Authors: Stoddard J; Haller SP; Costa V; Brotman MA; Jones M -
Adverse childhood experiences and hormonal contraception: Interactive impact on sexual reward function.
PLoS One Volume: 18 Page(s): e0279764
01/01/2023 Authors: Novick AM; Stoddard J; Johnson RL; Duffy KA; Berkowitz L; Costa VD; Sammel MD; Epperson CN