108 results on '"motivational salience"'
Search Results
2. The Relationship Between Depression Symptoms and Adolescent Neural Response During Reward Anticipation and Outcome Depends on Developmental Timing: Evidence From a Longitudinal Study
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Emily S. Kappenman, Danielle Kelly, Greg Hajcak, Joan L. Luby, Katherine R. Luking, M Deanna, and Kirsten Gilbert
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Longitudinal study ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Early adolescence ,Outcome (game theory) ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Developmental timing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,Humans ,Medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Biological Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Reward responsiveness ,Depression ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Electroencephalography ,Anticipation ,Motivational salience ,Child, Preschool ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background Blunted neural reward responsiveness (RR) is observed in youth depression. However, it is unclear whether symptoms of depression experienced early in development relate to adolescent RR beyond current symptoms and, further, whether such relationships with RR differ during two key components of reward processing: anticipation and outcome. Methods Within a prospective longitudinal study oversampled for early depression, children and caregivers completed semiannual diagnostic assessments beginning in preschool. In later adolescence, mean age = 16.49 years (SD = 0.94), youths’ (N = 100) neurophysiological responses to cues signaling likely win and loss and these outcomes were assessed. Longitudinally assessed dimensional depression and externalizing symptoms (often comorbid with depression as well as associated with RR) experienced at different developmental periods (preschool [age 3–5.11 years], school age [6–9.11 years], early adolescence [10–14.11 years], current) were used as simultaneous predictors of event-related potentials indexing anticipatory cue processing (cue-P3) and outcome processing (reward positivity/feedback negativity and feedback-P3). Results Blunted motivated attention to cues signaling likely win (cue-P3) was specifically predicted by early-adolescent depression symptoms. Blunted initial response to win (reward positivity) and loss (feedback negativity) outcomes was specifically predicted by preschool depression symptoms. Blunted motivational salience of win and loss outcomes (feedback-P3) was predicted by cumulative depression, not specific to any developmental stage. Conclusions Although blunted anticipation and outcome RR is a common finding in depression, specific deficits related to motivated attention to cues and initial outcome processing may map onto the developmental course of these symptoms.
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- 2021
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3. Electrophysiological responses to images ranging in motivational salience: Attentional abnormalities associated with schizophrenia-spectrum disorder risk
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Lilian Yanqing Li, Elizabeth A. Martin, and Mayan K. Castro
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Male ,Anhedonia ,lcsh:Medicine ,0302 clinical medicine ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Psychology ,Attention ,Selective attention ,Aetiology ,lcsh:Science ,Evoked Potentials ,Multidisciplinary ,05 social sciences ,Negativity effect ,Electroencephalography ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Visual Perception ,Female ,social and economic factors ,medicine.symptom ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Clinical psychology ,Adolescent ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,050105 experimental psychology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Clinical Research ,2.3 Psychological ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Human behaviour ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Disorder risk ,lcsh:R ,Brain Disorders ,Form Perception ,Electrophysiology ,Motivational salience ,Case-Control Studies ,Schizophrenia ,lcsh:Q ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Photic Stimulation ,Schizophrenia spectrum - Abstract
Individuals at risk for schizophrenia-spectrum disorders display abnormalities related to motivational salience, or the ability of stimuli to elicit attention due to associations with rewards or punishments. However, the nature of these abnormalities is unclear because most focus on responses to stimuli from broad “pleasant” and “unpleasant” categories and ignore the variation of motivational salience within these categories. In two groups at risk for schizophrenia-spectrum disorders—a Social Anhedonia group and a Psychotic-like Experiences group—and a control group, the current study examined event-related potential components sensitive to motivational salience—the Early Posterior Negativity (EPN), reflecting earlier selective attention, and the Late Positive Potential (LPP), reflecting sustained attention. Compared to controls, the Social Anhedonia group showed smaller increases in the EPN in response to erotica and smaller increases in the LPP as the motivational salience of pleasant images increased (excitinglarger increases in LPP amplitudes as the motivational salience of pleasant images increased. Also, both at-risk groups showed larger increases in the LPP to threatening images but smaller increases to mutilation images. These findings suggest that examining abnormalities beyond those associated with broad categories may be a way to identify mechanisms of dysfunction.
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- 2020
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4. Functional heterogeneity of perceived control in feedback processing
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Mengyao Wang, Ya Zheng, Jing Xu, and Shiyu Zhou
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Adult ,Male ,P3 amplitude ,Feedback, Psychological ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Original Manuscript ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Electroencephalography ,perceived control ,Theta power ,050105 experimental psychology ,feedback valence ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,Negative feedback ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Perceived control ,EEG ,Valence (psychology) ,Evoked Potentials ,Positive feedback ,Motivation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,Brain ,functional heterogeneity ,General Medicine ,Motivational salience ,Female ,Psychology ,psychological phenomena and processes ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Perceived control is a fundamental psychological function that can either boost positive affect or buffer negative affect. The current study addressed the electrophysiological correlates underlying perceived control, as exercised by choice, in the processing of feedback valence. Thirty-six participants performed an EEG choice task during which they received positive or negative feedback following choices made either by themselves or by a computer. Perceived control resulted in an enhanced reward positivity for positive feedback but increased theta power for negative feedback. Further, perceived control led to greater feedback P3 amplitude and delta power, regardless of feedback valence. These results suggest functional heterogeneity of perceived control in feedback processing as diverse as magnifying the reward signal, enhancing the need for control and increasing the motivational salience of outcome irrespective of valence.
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- 2020
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5. Reward, salience, and agency in event-related potentials for appetitive and aversive contexts
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Harry J. Stewardson and Thomas D. Sambrook
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Salience (language) ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Feedback, Psychological ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Mean squared prediction error ,Agency (philosophy) ,Electroencephalography ,Cognition ,Affect ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Motivational salience ,Reward ,Event-related potential ,medicine ,Psychology ,Evoked Potentials ,Value (mathematics) ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Cognitive architectures tasked with swiftly and adaptively processing biologically important events are likely to classify these on two central axes: motivational salience, that is, those events’ importance and unexpectedness, and motivational value, the utility they hold, relative to that expected. Because of its temporal precision, electroencephalography provides an opportunity to resolve processes associated with these two axes. A focus of attention for the last two decades has been the feedback-related negativity (FRN), a frontocentral component occurring 240–340 ms after valenced events that are not fully predicted. Both motivational salience and value are present in such events and competing claims have been made for which of these is encoded by the FRN. The present study suggests that motivational value, in the form of a reward prediction error, is the primary determinant of the FRN in active contexts, while in both passive and active contexts, a weaker and earlier overlapping motivational salience component may be present.
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- 2021
6. Effective Connectivity during an Avoidance-Based Pavlovian-to-Instrumental Transfer Task
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Charles F. Geier, Daniel J. Petrie, and Sy Miin Chow
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Corticostriatal circuits ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,effective connectivity ,General Neuroscience ,striatum ,Function group ,negative reinforcement ,Classical conditioning ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Striatum ,Article ,Task (project management) ,Motivational salience ,pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer ,medicine ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Reinforcement ,Neuroscience ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer (PIT) refers to a phenomenon whereby a classically conditioned stimulus (CS) impacts the motivational salience of instrumental behavior. We examined behavioral response patterns and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) based effective connectivity during an avoidance-based PIT task. Eleven participants (8 females, Mage = 28.2, SD = 2.8, range = 25–32 years) completed the task. Effective connectivity between a priori brain regions engaged during the task was determined using hemodynamic response function group iterative multiple model estimation (HRF-GIMME). Participants exhibited behavior that was suggestive of specific PIT, a CS previously associated with a reinforcing outcome increased instrumental responding directed at the same outcome. We did not find evidence for general PIT, a CS did not significantly increase instrumental responding towards a different but related outcome. Using HRF-GIMME, we recovered effective connectivity maps among corticostriatal circuits engaged during the task. Group-level paths revealed directional effects from left putamen to right insula and from right putamen to right cingulate. Importantly, a direct effect of specific PIT stimuli on blood–oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) activity in the left putamen was found. Results provide initial evidence of effective connectivity in key brain regions in an avoidance-based PIT task network. This study adds to the literature studying PIT effects in humans and employing GIMME models to understand how psychological phenomena are supported in the brain.
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- 2021
7. Error-related negativity (ERN) and ‘hot’ executive function in bilingual and monolingual preschoolers
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Srishti Nayak and Amanda R. Tarullo
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Linguistics and Language ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Cognition ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Education ,Task (project management) ,Error-related negativity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Motivational salience ,Cognitive development ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Neural learning ,Function (engineering) ,Psychology ,Neuroscience of multilingualism ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Early regular experience with dual-language management is thought to shape executive function (EF) circuitry during development. However, previous investigations of bilingual children's EF have largely focused on behavioral measures, or on cognitive aspects of EF. The first part of this study compared monolingual and bilingual preschoolers’ performance on more purely cognitive and more affective versions of a card-sort task, and the second part investigated Error-related negativity (ERN) event-related potential (ERP) waveforms to understand error-awareness mechanisms underlying task performance. Behavioral results showed bilingual advantages in reaction times but not accuracy, and interaction effects of language background, level of challenge, and affective/motivational salience on reaction times. Electrophysiological results revealed smaller ERN peak amplitudes in bilinguals compared to monolinguals in frontal and frontocentral midline regions. Results highlight that bilingualism may shape motivational mechanisms and neural learning mechanisms such as error-detection, such that bilinguals may be less focused on their errors.
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- 2020
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8. Late electrophysiological potentials and emotion in schizophrenia: A meta-analytic review
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Joanne F. Zinger, Drew H. Bailey, Elizabeth A. Martin, and Mayan K. Castro
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual perception ,Emotions ,Schizoaffective disorder ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Audiology ,Emotional processing ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Evoked Potentials ,Biological Psychiatry ,Motivation ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Event-Related Potentials, P300 ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Electrophysiology ,Standard error ,Motivational salience ,Case-Control Studies ,Schizophrenia ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,Abnormality ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Introduction There is mixed evidence about emotional processing abnormalities in schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder, with self-reports and clinician ratings indicating significant differences between patients and controls, but studies of in-the-moment, self-reported emotional experience finding only small differences between these groups. The current meta-analysis synthesizes statistics from studies measuring the P3 and LPP, two event-related potential (ERP) components sensitive to attentional allocation, to examine whether patients exhibit ERP response abnormalities to neutral and valenced visual stimuli. Methods Standardized mean amplitudes and standard errors of P3 and/or LPP waveforms (300–2000 ms) in response to neutral and valenced images were calculated for 13 studies (total n = 339 individuals with schizophrenia, 331 healthy controls). Results In response to neutral images, there were very small, non-significant differences in ERP amplitudes between patient and control groups (k = 9; Hedges' g = −0.06, 95% CI: −055, 0.43, p = 0.81). In contrast, patients showed a small, significant reduction in ERP amplitudes compared to controls in response to negative images (k = 13; Hedges' g = −0.32, 95% CI: −0.59, −0.05, p = 0.02) and a small, but nonsignificant, reduction in amplitudes in response to positive images (k = 7; Hedges' g = −0.27, 95% CI: −0.71, 0.18, p = 0.24). Conclusions and implications The current review indicates that compared to controls, patients have slightly diminished P3 and LPP amplitudes in response to positive and negative stimuli. This small reduction may reflect decreased attention allocation, possibly indicating an abnormality during a distinct stage of early processing related to evaluating the motivational salience of a stimulus.
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- 2019
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9. Salience neural network: another tribute to fashion or the key to all doors?
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Dubatova Irina Vladimirovna and Antsyborov Andrey Viktorovich
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neuroscience ,neuropsychiatric disorders ,нейросеть салиенса ,motivational salience ,нейробиология ,салиенс ,salience ,нейропсихические расстройства ,salience neural network ,мотивационный салиенс - Abstract
В настоящем обзоре представлен анализ данных литературы, посвященных исследованиям нейросети салиенса, динамике формирования нейросети в процессе онтогенеза головного мозга, дисрегуляции салиенса при нейродегенеративных и нейропсихических расстройствах. Рассмотрена роль дофаминергического дисбаланса в формировании аберрантного салиенса при шизофрении. Отдельное внимание уделено исследованиям значения мотивационного салиенса, и системы вознаграждения в патогенезе аддиктивных расстройств., This review presents an analysis of the literature on studies of the salience neural network, the dynamics of neural network formation during ontogenesis of the brain, and salience dysregulation in neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders. The role of dopaminergic imbalance in the formation of aberrant salience in schizophrenia is considered. Particular attention is paid to the studies of the significance of motivational salience and reward system in the pathogenesis of addictive disorders.
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- 2021
10. Motivational salience guides attention to valuable and threatening stimuli: Evidence from behaviour and fMRI
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Namrata Nanavaty, Mathur, Brian A. Anderson, Ahmed H, and Kim H
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Motivational salience ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Rewarding and aversive outcomes have opposing effects on behaviour, facilitating approach and avoidance, although we need to accurately anticipate each type of outcome in order to behave effectively. Attention is biased toward stimuli that have been learned to predict either type of outcome, and it remains an open question whether such orienting is driven by separate systems for value- and threat-based orienting or whether there exists a common underlying mechanism of attentional control driven by motivational salience. Here we provide a direct comparison of the neural correlates of value- and threat-based attentional capture following associative learning. Across multiple measures of behaviour and brain activation, our findings overwhelmingly support a motivational salience account of the control of attention. We conclude that there exists a core mechanism of experience-dependent attentional control driven by motivational salience, and that prior characterisations of attention as being value-driven or supporting threat monitoring need to be revisited.
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- 2021
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11. Dorsal Raphe Dopamine Neurons Signal Motivational Salience Dependent on Internal State, Expectation, and Behavioral Context
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Anat Kahan, Xinhong Chen, Jounhong Ryan Cho, J. Elliott Robinson, Viviana Gradinaru, and Daniel A. Wagenaar
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Dorsal Raphe Nucleus ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Cell type ,Population ,Mice, Transgenic ,Context (language use) ,Photometry ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dorsal raphe nucleus ,Dopamine ,medicine ,Animals ,Learning ,Fear learning ,Habituation, Psychophysiologic ,education ,Research Articles ,Neurons ,Motivation ,education.field_of_study ,Dopaminergic Neurons ,General Neuroscience ,Associative learning ,Microscopy, Fluorescence, Multiphoton ,030104 developmental biology ,Motivational salience ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Signal Transduction ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The ability to recognize motivationally salient events and adaptively respond to them is critical for survival. Here, we tested whether dopamine (DA) neurons in the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) contribute to this process in both male and female mice. Population recordings of DRNDAneurons during associative learning tasks showed that their activity dynamically tracks the motivational salience, developing excitation to both reward-paired and shock-paired cues. The DRNDAresponse to reward-predicting cues was diminished after satiety, suggesting modulation by internal states. DRNDAactivity was also greater for unexpected outcomes than for expected outcomes. Two-photon imaging of DRNDAneurons demonstrated that the majority of individual neurons developed activation to reward-predicting cues and reward but not to shock-predicting cues, which was surprising and qualitatively distinct from the population results. Performing the same fear learning procedures in freely-moving and head-fixed groups revealed that head-fixation itself abolished the neural response to aversive cues, indicating its modulation by behavioral context. Overall, these results suggest that DRNDAneurons encode motivational salience, dependent on internal and external factors.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTDopamine (DA) contributes to motivational control, composed of at least two functional cell types, one signaling for motivational value and another for motivational salience. Here, we demonstrate that DA neurons in the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) encode the motivational salience in associative learning tasks. Neural responses were dynamic and modulated by the animal's internal state. The majority of single-cells developed responses to reward or paired cues, but not to shock-predicting cues. Additional experiments with freely-moving and head-fixed mice showed that head-fixation abolished the development of cue responses during fear learning. This work provides further characterization on the functional roles of overlooked DRNDApopulations and an example that neural responses can be altered by head-fixation, which is commonly used in neuroscience.
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- 2021
12. The Causal Influence of Life Meaning on Weight and Shape Concerns in Women at Risk for Developing an Eating Disorder
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Sanne F. W. van Doornik, Klaske A. Glashouwer, Brian D. Ostafin, Peter J. de Jong, and Clinical Psychology and Experimental Psychopathology
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050103 clinical psychology ,body image ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,color-naming interference task ,Test (assessment) ,Developmental psychology ,Clinical Practice ,meaning in life ,lcsh:Psychology ,overvaluation of shape and weight ,Motivational salience ,eating disorder ,Causal inference ,overvaluation of weight and shape ,Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,goals ,Meaning (existential) ,Control (linguistics) ,Female students ,General Psychology ,Original Research - Abstract
Background: Although previous studies have shown an inverse relation between life meaning and eating disorder symptoms, the correlational nature of this evidence precludes causal inferences. Therefore, this study used an experimental approach to test the causal impact of life meaning on individuals' weight and shape concerns.Methods: Female students at risk for developing an eating disorder (N = 128) were randomly assigned to the control or the meaning condition, which involved thinking about and committing to pursue intrinsically valued life goals. A color-naming interference task was used to assess the motivational salience of body-related stimuli, and self-report measures were used to assess participants' overvaluation of weight and shape.Results: The meaning manipulation was effective in activating intrinsically valued life goals. However, it did not result in lower self-reported overvaluation of weight and shape or lower color-naming interference effects of body-related stimuli, compared to the control condition. Post-hoc analyses suggested that baseline meaning in life was related to the impact of the manipulation.Conclusions: This experimental study did not provide evidence for a causal influence of life meaning on the overvaluation of weight and shape in a high-risk group. The current findings suggest that we first need to examine the relationship between life meaning and eating disorder symptoms in more detail, before implementing brief meaning manipulations in clinical practice.
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- 2021
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13. Quantifying how much attention rodents allocate to motivationally-salient objects with a novel object preference test
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Deborah Talmi, John Gigg, Iasmina Hornoiu, Talmi, Deborah [0000-0002-7720-2706], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Male ,Motivational salience ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Olfactory stimuli ,Salient objects ,Arousal ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Preference test ,parasitic diseases ,Animals ,Attention ,Novel object recognition task ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Motivation ,Behavior, Animal ,Novel object preference test ,Novel object ,fungi ,Novelty ,food and beverages ,Cognition ,Recognition, Psychology ,Olfactory Perception ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Space Perception ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The allocation of attention can be modulated by the emotional value of a stimulus. In order to understand the biasing influence of emotion on attention allocation further, we require an animal test of how motivational salience modulates attention. In mice, female odour triggers arousal and elicits emotional responses in males. Here, we determined the extent to which objects labelled with female odour modulated the attention of C57BL/6J male mice. Seven experiments were conducted, using a modified version of the spontaneous Novel Object Recognition task. Attention was operationalised as differential exploration time of identical objects that were labelled with either female mouse odour (O+), a non-social odour, almond odour (Oa) or not labelled with any odour (O-). In some experiments we tested trial unique (novel) objects than never carried an odour (X-). Using this novel object preference test we found that when single objects were presented, as well as when two objects were presented simultaneously (so competed with each other for attention), O+ received preferential attention compared to O-. This result was independent of whether O+ was at a novel or familiar location. When compared with Oa at a novel location, O+ at a familiar location attracted more attention. Compared to X-, O+ received more exploration only when placed at a novel location, but attention to O+ and X- was equivalent when they were placed in a familiar location. These results suggest that C57BL/6J male mice weigh up aspects of odour, object novelty and special novelty for motivational salience, and that, in some instances, female odour elicits more attention (object exploration) compared to other object properties. The findings of this study pave the way to using motivationally-significant odours to modulate the cognitive processes that give rise to differential attention to objects.
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- 2021
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14. Neural Networks With Motivation
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Alexei A. Koulakov, Ngoc B. Tran, Sergey Shuvaev, Bo Li, and Marcus Stephenson-Jones
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,reinforcement learning ,motivational salience ,Computer science ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,Inference ,Machine Learning (cs.LG) ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,Ventral pallidum ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Reinforcement learning ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,hierarchical reinforcement learning ,Original Research ,media_common ,Interpretability ,Structure (mathematical logic) ,Cognitive science ,Artificial neural network ,Addiction ,Classical conditioning ,artificial intelligence ,machine learning ,FOS: Biological sciences ,Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition ,Neurons and Cognition (q-bio.NC) ,addiction ,Neuroscience - Abstract
How can animals behave effectively in conditions involving different motivational contexts? Here, we propose how reinforcement learning neural networks can learn optimal behavior for dynamically changing motivational salience vectors. First, we show that Q-learning neural networks with motivation can navigate in environment with dynamic rewards. Second, we show that such networks can learn complex behaviors simultaneously directed towards several goals distributed in an environment. Finally, we show that in Pavlovian conditioning task, the responses of the neurons in our model resemble the firing patterns of neurons in the ventral pallidum (VP), a basal ganglia structure involved in motivated behaviors. We show that, similarly to real neurons, recurrent networks with motivation are composed of two oppositely-tuned classes of neurons, responding to positive and negative rewards. Our model generates predictions for the VP connectivity. We conclude that networks with motivation can rapidly adapt their behavior to varying conditions without changes in synaptic strength when expected reward is modulated by motivation. Such networks may also provide a mechanism for how hierarchical reinforcement learning is implemented in the brain., Added the Methods section
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- 2021
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15. Analysis and Short Presentation of Study on Motivational Salience and Satisfaction with Training in the Field of Security and Defence
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Elitsa Petrova
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Presentation ,Motivational salience ,Field (Bourdieu) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Applied psychology ,General Medicine ,Psychology ,Training (civil) ,media_common - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of the article is a presentation and an analysis of research on motivational salience and satisfaction with training in the field of security and defense that was carried out with the assistance of a number of universities and academies in Europe. Method: Survey research and statistical analysis including, and certain statistical methods were applied for processing of the grouped statistical data, their interpretation and offering of the relevant decisions. Results: The study attempts to outline the foundation of the methodology for conducting research on motivational salience and its relation with satisfaction in security and defense training, following the example of higher education institutions in Europe. The research findings are characterized by the scale of scientific and practical research and covering 19 educational institutions in the field of security and defense in Europe. The research is distinguished by the presence of a scientific subject not only at the national level but also at the international level. The results are in the area of interest to the academic staff of the military universities and academies of Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Estonia, Spain, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, Sweden, Switzerland, and others. Conlusion/findings: The study was discussed at the extended scientific board of the Logistics of the Security Department at the Vasil Levski National Military University in Bulgaria. The thesis that has been elaborated as a result of carried out works was the subject of the defense in the Security and Defence area of higher education in Bulgaria.
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- 2020
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16. Your happy expressions encourage me to take risks: ERP evidence from an interpersonal gambling game
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Tingting Zheng, Yangmei Luo, Yingchao Chang, Hang Yuan, and Xuhai Chen
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General Neuroscience ,Decision Making ,Emotions ,Happiness ,Electroencephalography ,Interpersonal communication ,Anger ,Outcome (game theory) ,Preference ,Valuation (logic) ,Facial Expression ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Motivational salience ,Gambling ,Humans ,Single trial ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Evoked Potentials - Abstract
Although the influence of endogenous emotion on decision-making has been widely studied, the effect of interpersonal emotions on risk decision-making is less understood. To address this issue, participants were asked to perform an interpersonal gambling game after perceiving their cooperator's facial emotions. The results found that the cooperator's happy expressions increased individuals' risk-approaching choice compared with angry expressions. Moreover, happy expressions induced larger P300 potentials in the option assessment stage, and diminished the differences between losses and wins in feedback-related FRN/RewP in the outcome valuation stage. Additionally, single-trial analysis found that the neural response induced by interpersonal expressions and feedback could predict participants' subsequent decision-making. These findings suggest that interpersonal emotions shape individuals' risk preference through enhancing in-depth valuation in the option assessment stage and early motivational salience valuation in the outcome valuation stage.
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- 2020
17. Dorsal raphe dopamine neurons signal motivational salience dependent on internal and external states
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J. Elliott Robinson, Anat Kahan, Xinhong Chen, Jounhong Ryan Cho, Viviana Gradinaru, and Daniel A. Wagenaar
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education.field_of_study ,Dorsal raphe nucleus ,Motivational salience ,Salience (neuroscience) ,Dopamine ,Population ,medicine ,Fear learning ,education ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Associative learning ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The ability to recognize motivationally salient events and respond to them adaptively is critical for survival. Here we tested whether dopamine (DA) neurons in the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) contribute to this process. Population recordings of DRNDA neurons during associative learning tasks showed that their activity dynamically tracks salience, developing excitation to both reward- and punishment-paired cues. The DRNDA response to reward-predicting cues was diminished after satiety, suggesting modulation by internal states. DRNDA activity was also greater for unexpected outcomes than for expected outcomes. Two-photon imaging of DRNDA neurons demonstrated that the majority of individual neurons developed activation to reward-predicting cues but not to punishment-predicting cues, which was surprising and qualitatively distinct from the population results. Head-fixation during fear learning abolished the neural response to aversive cues, indicating modulation by behavioral context. Overall, these results suggest that DRNDA neurons encode motivational salience, dependent on internal and external factors.
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- 2020
- Full Text
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18. Response Inhibition and Binge Drinking During Transition to University: An fMRI Study
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Montserrat Corral, Samuel Suárez-Suárez, Jose Manuel Pérez-García, Socorro Rodríguez Holguín, Fernando Cadaveira, Sonia Doallo, and Universidade de Santiago de Compostela. Departamento de Psicoloxía Clínica e Psicobioloxía
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lcsh:RC435-571 ,Inferior frontal gyrus ,Binge drinking ,Neuroimaging ,Inhibición de resposta ,Drinking pattern ,03 medical and health sciences ,Neural activity ,0302 clinical medicine ,lcsh:Psychiatry ,Medicine ,response inhibition ,Response inhibition ,IRMf ,Original Research ,Psychiatry ,Anterior insula ,Estímulos asociados a alcohol ,business.industry ,alcohol-related stimuli ,fMRI ,Neuroimaxe ,binge drinking ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Alcohol-related stimuli ,Motivational salience ,Consumo intensivo de alcohol ,Go/NoGo ,business ,Insula ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: Binge Drinking (BD), a highly prevalent drinking pattern among youth, has been linked with anomalies in inhibitory control. However, it is still not well characterized whether the neural mechanisms involved in this process are compromised in binge drinkers (BDs). Furthermore, recent findings suggest that exerting inhibitory control to alcohol-related stimuli requires an increased effort in BDs, relative to controls, but the brain regions subserving these effects have also been scarcely investigated. Here we explored the impact of BD on the pattern of neural activity mediating response inhibition and its modulation by the motivational salience of stimuli (alcohol-related content). Methods: Sixty-seven (36 females) first-year university students, classified as BDs (n = 32) or controls (n = 35), underwent fMRI as they performed an alcohol-cued Go/NoGo task in which pictures of alcoholic or non-alcoholic beverages were presented as Go or NoGo stimuli. Results: During successful inhibition trials, BDs relative to controls showed greater activity in the bilateral inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), extending to the anterior insula, a brain region usually involved in response inhibition tasks, despite the lack of behavioral differences between groups. Moreover, BDs displayed increased activity in this region restricted to the right hemisphere when inhibiting a prepotent response to alcohol-related stimuli. Conclusions: The increased neural activity in the IFG/insula during response inhibition in BDs, in the absence of behavioral impairments, could reflect a compensatory mechanism. The findings suggest that response inhibition-related activity in the right IFG/insula is modulated by the motivational salience of stimuli and highlight the role of this brain region in suppressing responses to substance-associated cues. This investigation was supported by grants from the Spanish Ministerio de Sanidad, Servicios Sociales e Igualdad, Plan Nacional sobre Drogas (PNSD 2015/034), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (PSI2015-70525-P) co-funded for European Regional Development Fund and Xunta de Galicia (GRC ED431C 2017/06). SS-S was supported by a predoctoral fellowship from the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (BES-2016-076298). JP-G was supported by the FPU program from the Spanish Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (FPU16/01573) SI
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- 2020
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19. Creating Relevancy in Agricultural Science Information: Examining the Impact of Motivational Salience, Involvement and Pre-Existing Attitudes on Visual Attention to Scientific Information
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Laura Morgan Fischer, Courtney Meyers, R. Glenn Cummins, Mathew Baker, and Courtney Gibson
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Motivational salience ,Salience (language) ,Materials Science (miscellaneous) ,Visual attention ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Published
- 2020
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20. Common and distinct electrophysiological correlates of feedback processing during risky and ambiguous decision making
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Jie Cheng, Qi Li, Wei Yi, and Ya Zheng
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Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Decision Making ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Electroencephalography ,050105 experimental psychology ,Task (project management) ,Feedback ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,medicine ,Oscillation (cell signaling) ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,media_common ,Motivation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,Cognition ,Ambiguity ,Electrophysiology ,Motivational salience ,Gambling ,Control signal ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Risk and ambiguity are two fundamental parameters in decision making, and it remains elusive whether they are dissociable at the neural level. The current EEG study examined the ERP and oscillatory correlates of neural feedback processing under risky and ambiguous decision making. Participants performed a wheel-of-fortune task and received either gain or nongain feedback following risky or ambiguous gambles while their EEG was recorded. Results revealed that the early, obligatory detection of reward information was not dependent on the nature of the previous gamble, which was reflected by the reward positivity. However, risky gambling seemed to elicit an enhanced cognitive control signal as indexed by theta oscillation, whereas ambiguous gambling increased the affective and motivational salience during feedback processing as represented by the P3 and delta oscillation. Together, our findings suggest that feedback processing during risky and ambiguous decision making taps into common and distinct electrophysiological correlates.
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- 2020
21. Monetary Incentives Modulate Feedback-related Brain Activity
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Shuting Mei, Qi Li, Ya Zheng, and Xun Liu
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Male ,Adolescent ,Brain activity and meditation ,lcsh:Medicine ,Electroencephalography ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,medicine ,Humans ,Nervous System Physiological Phenomena ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Valence (psychology) ,lcsh:Science ,Feedback, Physiological ,Performance feedback ,Motivation ,Multidisciplinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,lcsh:R ,Brain ,Affective modulation ,Incentive ,Motivational salience ,Phase dynamics ,Female ,lcsh:Q ,Cues ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Previous research has shown that feedback evaluation is sensitive to monetary incentive. We investigated whether this sensitivity is driven by motivational salience (the difference between both rewarding and punishing events versus neutral events) or by motivational valence (the difference between rewarding and punishing events). Fifty-seven participants performed a monetary incentive delay task under a gain context, a loss context, and a neutral context with their electroencephalogram recorded. During the time domain, the feedback-related negativity (FRN) showed a motivational salience effect whereas the P3 displayed a reward valence effect. During the time-frequency domain, we observed a motivational salience effect for phase-locked theta power regardless of performance feedback, but a reward valence effect for non-phase-locked theta power in response to unsuccessful feedback. Moreover, we found a reward valence effect for phase-locked delta. These findings thus suggest that the affective modulation on feedback evaluation can be driven either by motivational valence or by motivational salience, which depends on the temporal dynamics (the FRN vs. the P3), the frequency dynamics (theta vs. delta power), as well as the phase dynamics (evoked vs. induced power).
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- 2018
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22. Chemogenetic activation of ventral tegmental area GABA neurons, but not mesoaccumbal GABA terminals, disrupts responding to reward-predictive cues
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Ajay N. Baindur, Michael J. Bruno, Jinwoo Park, Kathryn A. Hausknecht, Rohan V. Bhimani, Samir Haj-Dahmane, Roh-Yu Shen, Malte Feja, Caroline E. Bass, and Ken T. Wakabayashi
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Population ,Nucleus accumbens ,Biology ,Article ,Nucleus Accumbens ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,Dopamine ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Long-Evans ,GABAergic Neurons ,education ,Receptor ,Pharmacology ,Motivation ,education.field_of_study ,Ventral Tegmental Area ,Rats ,030227 psychiatry ,Ventral tegmental area ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Motivational salience ,nervous system ,Synapses ,Conditioning, Operant ,GABAergic ,Neuron ,Cues ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Cues predicting rewards can gain motivational properties and initiate reward-seeking behaviors. Dopamine projections from the ventral tegmental area (VTA) to the nucleus accumbens (NAc) are critical in regulating cue-motivated responding. Although, approximately one third of mesoaccumbal projection neurons are GABAergic, it is unclear how this population influences motivational processes and cue processing. This is largely due to our inability to pharmacologically probe circuit level contributions of VTA-GABA, which arises from diverse sources, including multiple GABA afferents, interneurons, and projection neurons. Here we used a combinatorial viral vector approach to restrict activating Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs (DREADDs) to GABA neurons in the VTA of wild-type rats trained to respond during a distinct audiovisual cue for sucrose. We measured different aspects of motivation for the cue or primary reinforcer, while chemogenetically activating either the VTA-GABA neurons or their projections to the NAc. Activation of VTA-GABA neurons decreased cue-induced responding and accuracy, while increasing latencies to respond to the cue and obtain the reward. Perseverative and spontaneous responses decreased, yet the rats persisted in entering the reward cup when the cue and reward were absent. However, activation of the VTA-GABA terminals in the accumbens had no effect on any of these behaviors. Together, we demonstrate that VTA-GABA neuron activity preferentially attenuates the ability of cues to trigger reward-seeking, while some aspects of the motivation for the reward itself are preserved. Additionally, the dense VTA-GABA projections to the NAc do not influence the motivational salience of the cue.
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- 2018
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23. Impact of Reward and Loss Anticipation on Cognitive Control: An Event-Related Potential Study in Subjects With Schizophrenia and Healthy Controls
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Eleonora Merlotti, A. Vignapiano, Antonella Amodio, Davide Palumbo, Armida Mucci, Giulia Maria Giordano, Silvana Galderisi, Vignapiano, Annarita, Mucci, Armida, Merlotti, Eleonora, Giordano, Giulia Maria, Amodio, Antonella, Palumbo, Davide, and Galderisi, Silvana
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Adult ,Male ,motivational salience ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,Event-related potential ,medicine ,Humans ,Control (linguistics) ,Evoked Potentials ,Motivation ,Avolition/apathy ,RDoC positive valence system ,Electroencephalography ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Anticipation ,030227 psychiatry ,schizophrenia ,Motivational salience ,Neurology ,Schizophrenia ,RDoC cognitive control ,Female ,Expressive deficit ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Introduction. Deficits of cognitive functions and motivation are core aspects of schizophrenia. The interaction of these deficits might contribute to impair the ability to flexibly adjust behavior in accordance with oneâs intentions and goals. Many studies have focused on the anterior N2 as a correlate of cognitive control based on motivational value. Aims. Given the key role of motivation impairment in schizophrenia as a predictor of functional outcome, we aimed to study the impact of reward- and avoidance-based motivation on cognitive control using N2. Method. Event-related potentials were recorded during the execution of the âMonetary Incentive Delay (MID)â task in 34 patients with schizophrenia (SCZ) stabilized on second-generation antipsychotics and 22 healthy controls (HC). Cognitive domains were assessed using the MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery. Negative symptom domains (Avolition/apathy and Expressive deficit), as well as positive and disorganization dimensions were also assessed in SCZ. Results. We did not observe any group difference in N2 amplitude or latency. In HC, N2 amplitude was significantly larger for anticipation of large loss with regard to all reward conditions and for all incentive versus neutral conditions. In SCZ, N2 amplitude did not discriminate between large loss and reward or between incentive and neutral conditions. N2 amplitude was not correlated with psychopathological dimensions or MCCB-assessed cognitive deficits in SCZ. Conclusion. Our data in HC are in line with the hypothesis that N2 amplitude reflects the impact of motivational salience on cognitive control. Our results in SCZ indicate a deficit in the discrimination of motivational salience to the service of cognitive control, independently of psychopathology and other cognitive deficits.
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- 2017
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24. Insensitivity to response-contingent feedback in adolescents with developmental language disorder (DLD)
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Joanna C. Lee
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Male ,Linguistics and Language ,Developmental language disorder ,Future studies ,Adolescent ,Dopamine ,Feedback, Psychological ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Individuality ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Punishment ,Reward ,medicine ,Humans ,Language Development Disorders ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Association (psychology) ,05 social sciences ,Corpus Striatum ,Motivational salience ,Learning disability ,Female ,Response contingent ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The aim of the study was to investigate the efficiency of the use of response-contingent feedback in adolescents with and without developmental language disorder (DLD) by using the balloon analogue risk task (BART). The BIS/BAS scales were also used to evaluate a participant's responses to reward- or punishment-related events in everyday situations. The results showed that adolescents with DLD performed on the BART at a suboptimal level due to inefficient use of response-contingent feedback. Findings of the BIS/BAS scales also generate a possible hypothesis of reduced motivational salience for larger monetary outcomes in DLD. Given that dopamine plays an important role in modulating BART responding through the corticostriatal pathways, these behavioral findings implicate an association between dopamine and individual differences in language, including DLD. Future studies are needed to directly test whether people with DLD have reduced level of dopamine in striatal neural synapses, leading to dopamine-dependent learning difficulty.
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- 2017
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25. Associated motivational salience impacts early sensory processing of human faces
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Holger Sennhenn-Reulen, Annekathrin Schacht, and Wiebke Hammerschmidt
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Adult ,Male ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Sensory system ,050105 experimental psychology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,Salience (neuroscience) ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Emotional expression ,Evoked Potentials ,Motivation ,Facial expression ,05 social sciences ,Brain ,Electroencephalography ,Associative learning ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Motivational salience ,Neurology ,Categorization ,Female ,Psychology ,Facial Recognition ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Facial expressions of emotion have an undeniable processing advantage over neutral faces, discernible both at behavioral level and in emotion-related modulations of several event-related potentials (ERPs). Recently it was proposed that also inherently neutral stimuli might gain salience through associative learning mechanisms. The present study investigated whether acquired motivational salience leads to processing advantages similar to biologically determined origins of inherent emotional salience by applying an associative learning paradigm to human face processing. Participants (N=24) were trained to categorize neutral faces to salience categories by receiving different monetary outcomes. ERPs were recorded in a subsequent test phase consisting of gender decisions on previously associated faces, as well as on familiarized and novel faces expressing happy, angry or no emotion. Previously reward-associated faces boosted the P1 component, indicating that acquired reward-associations modulate early sensory processing in extrastriate visual cortex. However, ERP modulations to emotional - primarily angry - expressions expanded to subsequent processing stages, as reflected in well-established emotion-related ERPs. The present study offers new evidence that motivational salience associated to inherently neutral stimuli can sharpen sensory encoding but does not obligatorily lead to preferential processing at later stages.
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- 2017
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26. Motivational Salience Modulates Early Visual Cortex Responses across Task Sets
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Valentina Rossi, Annekathrin Schacht, Annika Grass, Naomi Vanlessen, Gilles Pourtois, and Mareike Bayer
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Adult ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Electroencephalography ,050105 experimental psychology ,Visual processing ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Neural activity ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Valence (psychology) ,Evoked Potentials ,Visual Cortex ,media_common ,Motivation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,Motivational salience ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Motivationally relevant stimuli benefit from strengthened sensory processing. It is unclear, however, if motivational value of positive and negative valence has similar or dissociable effects on early visual processing. Moreover, whether these perceptual effects are task-specific, stimulus-specific, or more generally feature-based is unknown. In this study, we compared the effects of positive and negative motivational value on early sensory processing using ERPs. We tested the extent to which these effects could generalize to new task contexts and to stimuli sharing common features with the motivationally significant ones. At the behavioral level, stimuli paired with positive incentives were learned faster than stimuli paired with neutral or negative outcomes. The ERP results showed that monetary loss elicited higher neural activity in V1 (at the C1 level) compared with reward, whereas the latter influenced postperceptual processing stages (P300). Importantly, the early loss-related effect generalized to new contexts and to new stimuli with common features, whereas the later reward effects did not spill over to the new context. These results suggest that acquired negative motivational salience can influence early sensory processing by means of plastic changes in feature-based processing in V1.
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- 2017
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27. Anhedonia and Abstinence as Predictors of the Subjective Pleasantness of Positive, Negative, and Smoking-Related Pictures
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Matthew G. Kirkpatrick, Raina D. Pang, Adam M. Leventhal, Teresa M Halliday, and Casey R. Guillot
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Male ,Anhedonia ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Emotions ,0302 clinical medicine ,Original Investigation ,media_common ,Marketing ,Smoking ,Substance Abuse ,Tobacco Use Disorder ,Middle Aged ,Mental Health ,Public Health and Health Services ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Female ,Public Health ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Clinical psychology ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Clinical Sciences ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Pleasure ,03 medical and health sciences ,Reward ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Tobacco ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Depressive symptoms ,Motivation ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Prevention ,Addiction ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Abstinence ,Brain Disorders ,030227 psychiatry ,Motivational salience ,Smoking cessation ,Smoking Cessation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Author(s): Guillot, Casey R; Halliday, Teresa M; Kirkpatrick, Matthew G; Pang, Raina D; Leventhal, Adam M | Abstract: IntroductionAnhedonia-diminished interest or pleasure in response to rewards-is a dimension implicated in several psychiatric disorders linked to smoking. This laboratory study sought to identify motivational mechanisms linking anhedonia and tobacco addiction by testing the hypothesis that anhedonia, abstinence, and their interaction would predict excesses and deficits in the perceived pleasantness of smoking-related and positive pictures, respectively. We assessed the pleasantness of negative pictures as a secondary outcome.MethodsAfter a baseline session involving self-report measures of anhedonia and other factors, 125 regular smokers attended two counterbalanced experimental sessions (overnight abstinent and non-abstinent) at which they rated the pleasantness of positive, smoking-related, negative, and neutral (control) pictures presented via computer. The difference in pleasantness ratings of positive, smoking-related, and negative pictures relative to neutral pictures served as the index of participants' appraisal of the motivational salience of nondrug reward, drug reward, and aversive signals, respectively.ResultsWith and without adjusting for sex and depressive symptoms, greater anhedonia significantly or marginally predicted greater pleasantness of smoking (vs. neutral), lower pleasantness of positive (vs. neutral), less unpleasantness of negative (vs. neutral) pictures (|βs| = 0.18 to 0.35, ps = .007 to .07). Anhedonia by abstinence interaction effects on pleasantness ratings of each stimulus category (vs. neutral) were not significant (|βs| ≤ 0.02, ps ≥ .36).ConclusionsAnhedonia and abstinence additively increase the salience of smoking-related cues in anhedonic smokers. Smoking cessation efforts that attenuate sensitization to smoking stimuli may benefit anhedonic smokers early in quit attempts.ImplicationsTaken together, these findings provide tentative evidence that anhedonia is associated with a relative imbalance in the motivational salience of drug relative to nondrug rewards and may be associated with a generalized hypo-reactivity to both positive and negative stimuli. Though some prior smoking research has evidenced this relative imbalance in anhedonia with self-report or a smoking-choice task, we additionally show that this pattern may extend to hyper-affective reactivity to smoking-related stimuli being coincident with hypo-affective reactivity to nondrug-related positive stimuli (ie, may extend to greater pleasantness ratings of smoking pictures being accompanied by lower pleasantness ratings of positive pictures).
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- 2017
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28. Nucleus accumbens fast-spiking interneurons in motivational and addictive behaviors
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William J. Wright, Terra A Schall, and Yan Dong
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0301 basic medicine ,Drug taking ,nucleus accumbens ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Drug-Seeking Behavior ,Context (language use) ,Nucleus accumbens ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Cocaine-Related Disorders ,0302 clinical medicine ,Feedforward inhibition ,Cocaine ,Interneurons ,Humans ,education ,Molecular Biology ,media_common ,education.field_of_study ,Motivation ,Addiction ,Drug Abstinence ,Behavior, Addictive ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,030104 developmental biology ,Motivational salience ,addiction ,fast-spiking interneuron ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The development of drug addiction is associated with functional adaptations within the reward circuitry, within which the nucleus accumbens (NAc) is anatomically positioned as an interface between motivational salience and behavioral output. The functional output of NAc is profoundly altered after exposure to drugs of abuse, and some of the functional changes continue to evolve during drug abstinence, contributing to numerous emotional and motivational alterations related drug taking, seeking, and relapse. As in most brain regions, the functional output of NAc is critically dependent on the dynamic interaction between excitation and inhibition. One of the most prominent sources of inhibition within the NAc arises from fast-spiking interneurons (FSIs). Each NAc FSI innervates hundreds of principal neurons, and orchestrates population activity through its powerful and sustained feedforward inhibition. While the role of NAc FSIs in the context of drug addiction remains poorly understood, emerging evidence suggests that FSIs and FSI-mediated local circuits are key targets for drugs of abuse to tilt the functional output of NAc toward a motivational state favoring drug seeking and relapse. In this review, we discuss recent findings and our conceptualization about NAc FSI-mediated regulation of motivated and cocaine-induced behaviors. We hope that the conceptual framework proposed in this review may provide a useful guidance for ongoing and future studies to determine how FSIs influence the function of NAc and related reward circuits, ultimately leading to addictive behaviors.
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- 2019
29. Performance Monitoring and Correct Response Significance in Conscientious Individuals
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Mike F. Imhof and Jascha Rüsseler
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CRN ,motivational salience ,response monitoring ,error-related negativity ,task engagement ,five factor model ,conscientiousness ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,Neuroscience ,Original Research ,correct-response negativity - Abstract
There is sufficient evidence to believe that variations in the error-related negativity (ERN) are linked to dispositional characteristics in individuals. However, explanations of individual differences in the amplitude of the ERN cannot be derived from functional theories of the ERN. The ERN has a counterpart that occurs after correct responses (correct-response negativity, CRN). Based on the assumption that ERN and CRN reflect an identical cognitive process, variations in CRN might be associated with dispositional characteristics as well. Higher CRN amplitudes have been found to reflect task engagement. In the present study, a simple-choice-reaction task was used to investigate ERN and CRN amplitudes in relation to their score on a conscientiousness scale. The task consisted of a simple rule that required pressing the left or right key when a circle or square appeared, respectively. During alternative conditions that occur infrequently, participants were instructed to violate or reverse the previously established response rules. Smaller ΔERN amplitudes (manifested in almost equal CRN and ERN amplitudes) and a tendency of better task performance from participants scoring high on the conscientiousness scale might indicate a greater focus on the task and higher motivation of responding correctly. In addition, higher Pc amplitudes directly following the CRN indicated that the response monitoring system of less conscientious participants showed a higher disengagement. The role of individual differences in CRN amplitude should be studied in future experiments on performance monitoring.
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- 2019
30. Extent and time-course of competition in visual cortex between emotionally arousing distractors and a concurrent task
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Andreas Keil, Matthias M. Müller, and Menton M. Deweese
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Injury control ,Emotions ,Poison control ,Visual evoked potentials ,Audiology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Distraction ,Reaction Time ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Visual Cortex ,Communication ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Motivational salience ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Time course ,Evoked Potentials, Visual ,Female ,Cues ,business ,Psychology ,Psychomotor Performance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Emotionally arousing cues automatically attract attentional resources, which may be at the cost of processing task-related information. Of central importance is how the visual system resolves competition for processing resources among stimuli differing in motivational salience. Here, we assessed the extent and time-course of competition between emotionally arousing distractors and task-related stimuli in a frequency-tagging paradigm. Steady-state visual evoked potentials (ssVEPs) were evoked using random-dot kinematograms that consisted of rapidly flickering (8.57 Hz) dots, superimposed upon emotional or neutral distractor pictures flickering at 12 Hz. The time-varying amplitude of the ssVEP evoked by the motion detection task showed a significant reduction to the task-relevant stream while emotionally arousing pictures were presented as distractors. Competition between emotionally arousing pictures and moving dots began 450 ms after picture onset and persisted for an additional 2600 ms. Competitive effects of the overlapping task and picture stream revealed cost effects for the motion detection task when unpleasant pictures were presented as distractors between 450 and 1650 ms after picture onset, where an increase in ssVEP amplitude to the flickering picture stimulus was at the cost of ssVEP amplitude to the flickering dot stimulus. Cost effects were generalized to all emotionally arousing contents between 1850 and 3050 ms after picture onset, where the greatest amount of competition was evident for conditions in which emotionally arousing pictures, compared to neutral, served as distractors. In sum, the processing capacity of the visual system as measured by ssVEPs is limited, resulting in prioritized processing of emotionally relevant cues.
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- 2016
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31. Hypomania and depression associated with distinct neural activity for immediate and future rewards
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James E. Glazer, Narun Pornpattananangkul, Robin Nusslock, and Nicholas J. Kelley
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Adult ,Male ,Bipolar Disorder ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Feedback, Psychological ,Vulnerability ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Neural activity ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Reward ,Time estimation ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Bipolar disorder ,Biological Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Cerebral Cortex ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Motivation ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Electroencephalography ,medicine.disease ,Event-Related Potentials, P300 ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Motivational salience ,Hypomania ,Neurology ,Time Perception ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Psychomotor Performance ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Bipolar spectrum and unipolar depressive disorders have been associated with distinct and opposite profiles of reward-related neural activity. These opposite profiles may reflect a differential preexisting vulnerability for both types of disorders. In support, recent ERP studies find that, following reward feedback, a larger reward positivity (RewP) is associated with greater vulnerability for bipolar spectrum disorders, whereas a smaller RewP is associated with greater vulnerability for depression. However, prior studies have investigated only immediate rewards and have not examined dimensions of both bipolar disorder and unipolar depression within the same sample. The present study is the first to investigate feedback-related ERP correlates of proneness to hypomania and unipolar depressive tendencies within the same sample and to expand our scope to include future rewards. Participants completed a modified time estimation task where the same monetary reward was available immediately or at one of five different future dates. Results revealed proneness to hypomania and unipolar depressive tendencies were related to an elevated and blunted RewP, respectively, but only following immediate rewards (i.e., today). Following rewards in the distant future (e.g., 8 months), proneness to hypomania and depressive tendencies were associated with elevated and blunted amplitudes for the P3, respectively, a subsequent ERP component reflecting motivational salience during extended feedback processing. Furthermore, these opposing profiles were independent of, and significantly different from, one another. These results suggest that feedback-related ERPs following immediate and future rewards are candidate biomarkers that can physiologically separate vulnerability for bipolar spectrum from unipolar depressive disorders.
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- 2018
32. Luring the Motor System: Impact of Performance-Contingent Incentives on Pre-Movement Beta-Band Activity and Motor Performance
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François Thénault, Pierre-Michel Bernier, Raphaël Hamel, Kevin Whittingstall, Félix-Antoine Savoie, and Angélina Lacroix
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Male ,Movement ,Female humans ,Electroencephalography ,Basal Ganglia ,03 medical and health sciences ,Beta band ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Punishment ,Reward ,Parietal Lobe ,Motor system ,Basal ganglia ,medicine ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Research Articles ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Motivation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,Frontal Lobe ,Motivational salience ,Incentive ,Female ,Psychology ,Beta Rhythm ,Movement planning ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Psychomotor Performance ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
It has been shown that when incentives are provided during movement preparation, activity in parieto-frontal regions reflects both expected value and motivational salience. Yet behavioral work suggests that the processing of rewards is faster than for punishments, raising the possibility that expected value and motivational salience manifest at different latencies during movement planning. Given the role of beta oscillations (13–30 Hz) in movement preparation and in communication within the reward circuit, this study investigated how beta activity is modulated by positive and negative monetary incentives during reach planning, and in particular whether it reflects expected value and motivational salience at different latencies. Electroencephalography was recorded while male and female humans performed a reaching task in which reward or punishment delivery depended on movement accuracy. Before a preparatory delay period, participants were informed of the consequences of hitting or missing the target, according to four experimental conditions: Neutral (hit/miss:+0/−0¢), Reward (hit/miss:+5/−0¢), Punish (hit/miss:+0/−5¢) and Mixed (hit/miss:+5/−5¢). Results revealed that beta power over parieto-frontal regions was strongly modulated by incentives during the delay period, with power positively correlating with movement times. Interestingly, beta power was selectively sensitive to potential rewards early in the delay period, after which it came to reflect motivational salience as movement onset neared. These results demonstrate that beta activity reflects expected value and motivational salience on different time scales during reach planning. They also provide support for models that link beta activity with basal ganglia and dopamine for the allocation of neural resources according to behavioral salience.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTThe present work demonstrates that pre-movement parieto-frontal beta power is modulated by monetary incentives in a goal-directed reaching task. Specifically, beta power transiently scaled with the availability of rewards early in movement planning, before reflecting motivational salience as movement onset neared. Moreover, pre-movement beta activity correlated with the vigor of the upcoming movement. These findings suggest that beta oscillations reflect neural processes that mediate the invigorating effect of incentives on motor performance, possibly through dopamine-mediated interactions with the basal ganglia.
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- 2018
33. Females Are More Sensitive to Opponent’s Emotional Feedback: Evidence From Event-Related Potentials
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Yangmei Luo, Yingchao Chang, Xuhai Chen, Tingting Zheng, and Hang Yuan
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Interpersonal communication ,050105 experimental psychology ,decision making ,interpersonal emotion ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Event-related potential ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Emotional expression ,Interpersonal interaction ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,Original Research ,05 social sciences ,Information processing ,RewP ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Motivational salience ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Neurology ,gender difference ,feedback P300 ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience ,Cognitive appraisal ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
It is widely believed that females outperformed males in emotional information processing. The present study tested whether the female superiority in emotional information processing exists in a naturalistic social-emotional context, if so, what the temporal dynamics underlies. The behavioral and electrophysiological responses were recorded while participants were performing an interpersonal gambling game with opponents’ facial emotions given as feedback. The results yielded that emotional cues modulated the influence of monetary feedback on outcome valuation. Critically, this modulation was more conspicuous in females: opponents’ angry expressions increased females’ risky tendency and decreased the amplitude of reward positivity (RewP) and feedback P300. These findings indicate that females are more sensitive to emotional expressions in real interpersonal interactions, which is manifested in both early motivational salience detection and late conscious cognitive appraisal stages of feedback processing.
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- 2018
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34. Money or smiles: Independent ERP effects of associated monetary reward and happy faces
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Wiebke Hammerschmidt, Annekathrin Schacht, Louisa Kulke, and Christina Broering
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Male ,Physiology ,Emotions ,Happiness ,Social Sciences ,Event-Related Potentials ,lcsh:Medicine ,Learning and Memory ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,lcsh:Science ,Evoked Potentials ,Clinical Neurophysiology ,Brain Mapping ,05 social sciences ,Electroencephalography ,Electrophysiology ,Facial Expression ,Bioassays and Physiological Analysis ,Brain Electrophysiology ,Categorization ,Engineering and Technology ,Female ,Anatomy ,Arousal ,Research Article ,Cognitive psychology ,Adult ,Prioritization ,Imaging Techniques ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Neurophysiology ,Neuroimaging ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Face Recognition ,050105 experimental psychology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Reward ,Memory ,Salience (neuroscience) ,Reaction Time ,Learning ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Electrodes ,Behavior ,Motivation ,Facial expression ,Electrophysiological Techniques ,lcsh:R ,Cognitive Psychology ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Associative learning ,Affect ,Motivational salience ,Reference Electrodes ,Face ,Cognitive Science ,Perception ,lcsh:Q ,Clinical Medicine ,Electronics ,Head ,Photic Stimulation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
In comparison to neutral faces, facial expressions of emotion are known to gain attentional prioritization, mainly demonstrated by means of event-related potentials (ERPs). Recent evidence indicated that such a preferential processing can also be elicited by neutral faces when associated with increased motivational salience via reward. It remains, however, an open question whether impacts of inherent emotional salience and associated motivational salience might be integrated. To this aim, expressions and outcomes were orthogonally combined. Participants (N=42) learned to explicitly categorize happy and neutral faces as either reward- or zero-outcome-related via an associative learning paradigm. ERP components (P1, N170, EPN, and LPC) were measured throughout the experiment, and separately analyzed before (learning phase) and after (consolidation phase) reaching a pre-defined learning criterion. Happy facial expressions boosted early processing stages, as reflected in enhanced amplitudes of the N170 and EPN, both during learning and consolidation. In contrast, effects of monetary reward became evident only after successful learning and in form of enlarged amplitudes of the LPC, a component linked to higher-order evaluations. Interactions between expressions and associated outcome were absent in all ERP components of interest. The present study provides novel evidence that acquired salience impacts stimulus processing but independent of the effects driven by happy facial expressions.
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- 2018
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35. Current perspectives on incentive salience and applications to clinical disorders
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Shelley M. Warlow, Kent C. Berridge, Erin E. Naffziger, and Jeffrey J. Olney
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Cognitive Neuroscience ,Addiction ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Anhedonia ,Affective neuroscience ,medicine.disease ,Article ,030227 psychiatry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Motivational salience ,Schizophrenia ,Incentive salience ,medicine ,Paranoia ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Affective neuroscience research has revealed that reward contains separable components of ‘liking’, ‘wanting’, and learning. Here we focus on current ‘liking’ and ‘wanting’ findings and applications to clinical disorders. ‘Liking’ is the hedonic impact derived from a pleasant experience, and is amplified by opioid and related signals in discrete sites located in limbic-related brain areas. ‘Wanting’ refers to incentive salience, a motivation process for reward, and is mediated by larger systems involving mesocorticolimbic dopamine. Deficits in incentive salience may contribute to avolitional features of depression and related disorders, whereas deficits in hedonic impact may produce true anhedonia. Excesses in incentive salience, on the other hand, can lead to addiction, especially when narrowly focused on a particular target. Finally, a fearful form of motivational salience may even contribute to some paranoia symptoms of schizophrenia and related disorders.
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- 2018
36. Contextual valence modulates the neural dynamics of risk processing
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Kai Wang, Qi Li, Haiyan Wu, Ya Zheng, and Xun Liu
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Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,General Neuroscience ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Negativity effect ,Risk neutral ,Risk-seeking ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Motivational salience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Neurology ,Salient ,Feedback related negativity ,Valence (psychology) ,Psychology ,Risk taking ,Social psychology ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
A well-known bias in risky decision making is that most people tend to be risk averse when gains are salient but risk seeking when losses are salient. The present study addressed the neural dynamics of this process by recording ERPs during a gambling task in a gain and a loss context. Behaviorally, participants were found to be risk averse in the gain context but risk neutral in the loss context. During the anticipation stage, an increased stimulus-preceding negativity was elicited by high- versus low-risk choices in the gain but not the loss context. During the outcome-appraisal stage, the feedback-related negativity was larger after high- versus low-risk choices in the gain instead of the loss context. For the P300, an outcome valence effect (a larger P300 for gain vs. loss outcomes) emerged following the high- versus low-risk decisions in the gain but not the loss context. Our findings suggest that risk processing can be modulated by the context of valence during the anticipation stage and by both the contextual valence and the outcome valence during the outcome-appraisal stage, which may be driven by the motivational salience imposed by the context of valence.
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- 2015
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37. Age-related differences in early novelty processing: Using PCA to parse the overlapping anterior P2 and N2 components
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Erich S. Tusch, Katherine K. Mott, Kirk R. Daffner, Brittany R. Alperin, and Phillip J. Holcomb
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Adult ,Male ,Electroencephalography ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Age related ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,Evoked Potentials ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Principal Component Analysis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,Age Factors ,Novelty ,Brain ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Motivational salience ,Principal component analysis ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Photic Stimulation ,Psychomotor Performance - Abstract
Previous work demonstrated age-associated increases in the anterior P2 and age-related decreases in the anterior N2 in response to novel stimuli. Principal component analysis (PCA) was used to determine if the inverse relationship between these components was due to their temporal and spatial overlap. PCA revealed an early anterior P2, sensitive to task relevance, and a late anterior P2, responsive to novelty, both exhibiting age-related amplitude increases. A PCA factor representing the anterior N2, sensitive to novelty, exhibited age-related amplitude decreases. The late P2 and N2 to novels inversely correlated. Larger late P2 amplitude to novels was associated with better behavioral performance. Age-related differences in the anterior P2 and N2 to novel stimuli likely represent age-associated changes in independent cognitive operations. Enhanced anterior P2 activity (indexing augmentation in motivational salience) may be a compensatory mechanism for diminished anterior N2 activity (indexing reduced ability of older adults to process ambiguous representations).
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- 2015
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38. Threat-conditioned contexts modulate the late positive potential to faces-A mobile EEG/virtual reality study
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Christopher Stolz, Dominik Endres, and Erik M. Mueller
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Adult ,Male ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Conditioning, Classical ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Context (language use) ,Affective neuroscience ,Electroencephalography ,Virtual reality ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental Neuroscience ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Fear conditioning ,Everyday life ,Evoked Potentials ,Biological Psychiatry ,Cerebral Cortex ,Facial expression ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Virtual Reality ,Fear ,Facial Expression ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Motivational salience ,Neurology ,Social Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,Facial Recognition ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
In everyday life, the motivational value of faces is bound to the contexts in which faces are perceived. Electrophysiological studies have demonstrated that inherent negatively valent contexts modulate cortical face processing as assessed with ERP components. However, it is not well understood whether learned (rather than inherent) and three-dimensional aversive contexts similarly modulate the neural processing of faces. Using full immersive virtual reality (VR) and mobile EEG techniques, 25 participants underwent a differential fear conditioning paradigm, in which one virtual room was paired with an aversive noise burst (threat context) and another with a nonaversive noise burst (safe context). Subsequently, avatars with neutral or angry facial expressions were presented in the threat and safe contexts while EEG was recorded. Analysis of the late positive potential (LPP), which presumably indicates motivational salience, revealed a significant interaction of context (threat vs. safe) and face type (neutral vs. angry). Neutral faces evoked increased LPP amplitudes in threat versus safe contexts, while angry faces evoked increased early LPP amplitudes regardless of context. In addition to indicating that threat-conditioned contexts alter the processing of ambiguous faces, the present study demonstrates the successful integration of EEG and VR with particular relevance for affective neuroscience research.
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- 2017
39. Implicit reward associations impact face processing: Time-resolved evidence from event-related brain potentials and pupil dilations
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Louisa Kulke, Annekathrin Schacht, Wiebke Hammerschmidt, and Igor Kagan
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Electroencephalography ,Reflex, Pupillary ,050105 experimental psychology ,Pupil ,Arousal ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,Salience (neuroscience) ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Emotional expression ,Attention ,Evoked Potentials ,Performance feedback ,Facial expression ,Motivation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Subliminal stimuli ,05 social sciences ,Pupil size ,Association Learning ,Brain ,Implicit learning ,Facial Expression ,Motivational salience ,Neurology ,Female ,Psychology ,Facial Recognition ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Photic Stimulation ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The present study aimed at investigating whether associated motivational salience causes preferential processing of inherently neutral faces similar to emotional expressions by means of event-related brain potentials (ERPs) and changes of the pupil size. To this aim, neutral faces were implicitly associated with monetary outcome, while participants (N = 44) performed a face-matching task with masked primes that ensured performance around chance level and thus an equal proportion of gain, loss, and zero outcomes. During learning, motivational context strongly impacted the processing of the fixation, prime and mask stimuli prior to the target face, indicated by enhanced amplitudes of subsequent ERP components and increased pupil size. In a separate test session, previously associated faces as well as novel faces with emotional expressions were presented within the same task but without motivational context and performance feedback. Most importantly, previously gain-associated faces amplified the LPC, although the individually contingent face-outcome assignments were not made explicit during the learning session. Emotional expressions impacted the N170 and EPN components. Modulations of the pupil size were absent in both motivationally-associated and emotional conditions. Our findings demonstrate that neural representations of neutral stimuli can acquire increased salience via implicit learning, with an advantage for gain over loss associations.
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- 2017
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40. The time course of incentive processing in anticipatory and consummatory anhedonia
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Jing Xu, Youmei Chen, Ya Zheng, and Li Zhou
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Adult ,Male ,Pleasure ,Dissociation (neuropsychology) ,Anhedonia ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Electroencephalography ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Event-related potential ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Evoked Potentials ,media_common ,Motivation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Depression ,05 social sciences ,Large sample ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Motivational salience ,Time course ,Schizophrenia ,Female ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Background Anhedonia, the reduced capacity to experience pleasure, has long been regarded as a cardinal symptom in depression and schizophrenia. Recent evidence highlights that anhedonia is not a single construct but consists of an anticipatory component and a consummatory component, which is captured by the Temporal Experience of Pleasure Scale (TEPS). The current event-related potential study examined the electrophysiological underpinnings of anticipatory and consummatory aspects of anhedonia as assessed by the TEPS in a non-clinical sample. Methods EEG was recorded during both anticipatory and consummatory phases of incentive processing in an anticipatory-anhedonia (ANT) group, a consummatory-anhedonia (CON) group, and a control (CNT) group selected from a large sample based on their TEPS scores. Results The ANT relative to the CON group exhibited a reduced cue-P3 during the anticipatory phase, a less positive feedback-related negativity (FRN) and a blunted feedback P3 (fb-P3) during the consummatory phase. Moreover, correlation results revealed a dissociation between anticipatory and consummatory anhedonia, which occurred in an unexpected way such that higher levels of anticipatory anhedonia were associated with reduced fb-P3 amplitudes whereas higher levels of consummatory anhedonia with enhanced cue-P3 and FRN amplitudes. Limitation The sample size for each group was relatively small. Conclusions Anticipatory and consummatory anhedonia as measured by the TEPS might be driven by abnormal motivational salience, which was represented by the cue-P3 during the anticipatory phase and the FRN and fb-P3 during the consummatory phase of incentive processing.
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- 2017
41. Dopamine neuron dependent behaviors mediated by glutamate cotransmission
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Nao Chuhma, Inna Gaisler-Salomon, Gretchen M. Thomsen, Holly Moore, Yvonne Wang, David Sulzer, Anna-Claire Siena, Susana Mingote, Caroline E. Sferrazza, Stephen Rayport, Andra Mihali, Ilana Zucker-Scharff, Martha G. Welch, José E. Lizardi-Ortiz, and Abigail Kalmbach
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0301 basic medicine ,motivational salience ,Mouse ,Action Potentials ,Mice ,Latent inhibition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Biology (General) ,0303 health sciences ,Behavior, Animal ,biology ,Glutaminase ,General Neuroscience ,Dopaminergic ,Glutamate receptor ,General Medicine ,Ventral tegmental area ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene Knockdown Techniques ,Medicine ,Research Article ,medicine.drug ,QH301-705.5 ,Science ,Glutamic Acid ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Glutamatergic ,Dopamine ,medicine ,Animals ,latent inhibition ,Amphetamine ,030304 developmental biology ,Dopamine transporter ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Dopaminergic Neurons ,Ventral Tegmental Area ,glutaminase ,amphetamine sensitization ,schizophrenia ,030104 developmental biology ,nervous system ,biology.protein ,resilience model ,Neuron ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area use glutamate as a cotransmitter. To elucidate the behavioral role of the cotransmission, we targeted the glutamate-recycling enzyme glutaminase (gene Gls1). In mice with a dopamine transporter (Slc6a3)-driven conditional heterozygous (cHET) reduction of Gls1 in their dopamine neurons, dopamine neuron survival and transmission were unaffected, while glutamate cotransmission at phasic firing frequencies was reduced, enabling a selective focus on the cotransmission. The mice showed normal emotional and motor behaviors, and an unaffected response to acute amphetamine. Strikingly, amphetamine sensitization was reduced and latent inhibition potentiated. These behavioral effects, also seen in global GLS1 HETs with a schizophrenia resilience phenotype, were not seen in mice with an Emx1-driven forebrain reduction affecting most brain glutamatergic neurons. Thus, a reduction in dopamine neuron glutamate cotransmission appears to mediate significant components of the GLS1 HET schizophrenia resilience phenotype, and glutamate cotransmission appears to be important in attribution of motivational salience. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.27566.001, eLife digest A small cluster of neurons found in the midbrain use dopamine to send signals to neurons involved in many processes including motivation and attention. Drugs of abuse such as amphetamine co-opt motivation by increasing dopamine signaling. When used excessively, the drugs can engender delusional thinking, as is seen in schizophrenia. In contrast, the drugs used to treat schizophrenia block excess dopamine signaling. Recently it has been shown that dopamine neurons in the middle part of the midbrain release both dopamine and glutamate. The exact role of this dopamine neuron glutamate signaling has been difficult to find out. Previous experiments involved genetically modifying dopamine neurons so that they would not release glutamate. However, this affected how the neurons develop, making it difficult to discern the effects of glutamate signaling. Now, in genetically modified mice that have less glutaminase in their dopamine neurons than normal, Mingote et al. find that glutamate signaling is reduced just when dopamine neurons fire more rapidly. This did not change how dopamine neurons develop or how they use dopamine to signal. This reduction in dopamine neuron glutamate signaling affects two behaviors that are driven by the activity of dopamine neurons. First, it reduces the effects of a process called amphetamine sensitization, in which repeated doses of amphetamine increase dopamine neuron signaling so that events associated with drug use take up more attention than they normally would. Second, the modified mice were better able to ignore familiar, irrelevant sounds in their environment; the mice continued to pay less attention to a familiar sound, even when it was paired with a shock and came to predict an unpleasant event – a process known as potentiation of latent inhibition. The effects on both of these processes suggest that dopamine neuron glutamate signaling helps animals decide which features of their environment are most important. This result suggests a new way of treating schizophrenia. When humans take amphetamine repeatedly, which produces sensitization, they can develop psychosis, a principal symptom of schizophrenia. During a period of psychosis, thoughts and perceptions are disturbed, making it difficult to distinguish between relevant or irrelevant things in the environment. By reducing amphetamine sensitization and potentiating latent inhibition, blocking dopamine neuron glutamate signaling might help to treat the symptoms of schizophrenia. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.27566.002
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- 2017
42. Neural and behavioral responses to attractiveness in adult and infant faces
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Amanda C. Hahn, David I. Perrett, University of St Andrews. School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St Andrews. Institute of Behavioural and Neural Sciences, and University of St Andrews. Centre for Social Learning & Cognitive Evolution
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Adult ,Male ,Attractiveness ,Motivational salience ,BF Psychology ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,BF ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Choice Behavior ,Developmental psychology ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Reward ,Perception ,Sex differences ,Face processing ,Humans ,10. No inequality ,media_common ,Brain Mapping ,Motivation ,Sex Characteristics ,Neural correlates of consciousness ,Neural correlates ,Physical attractiveness ,Brain ,Infant ,Facial attractiveness ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Face ,Incentive salience ,Sexual orientation ,Female ,Orbitofrontal cortex ,Psychology - Abstract
Amanda Hahn is funded by European Research Council Grant 282655. Facial attractiveness provides a very powerful motivation for sexual and parental behavior. We therefore review the importance of faces to the study of neurobiological control of human reproductive motivations. For heterosexual individuals there is a common brain circuit involving the nucleus accumbens, the medial prefrontal, dorsal anterior cingulate and the orbitofrontal cortices that is activated more by attractive than unattractive faces, particularly for faces of the opposite sex. Behavioral studies indicate parallel effects of attractiveness on incentive salience or willingness to work to see faces. There is some evidence that the reward value of opposite sex attractiveness is more pronounced in men than women, perhaps reflecting the greater importance assigned to physical attractiveness by men when evaluating a potential mate. Sex differences and similarities in response to facial attractiveness are reviewed. Studies comparing heterosexual and homosexual observers indicate the orbitofrontal cortex and mediodorsal thalamus are more activated by faces of the desired sex than faces of the less-preferred sex, independent of observer gender or sexual orientation. Infant faces activate brain regions that partially overlap with those responsive to adult faces. Infant faces provide a powerful stimulus, which also elicits sex differences in behavior and brain responses that appear dependent on sex hormones. There are many facial dimensions affecting perceptions of attractiveness that remain unexplored in neuroimaging, and we conclude by suggesting that future studies combining parametric manipulation of face images, brain imaging, hormone assays and genetic polymorphisms in receptor sensitivity are needed to understand the neural and hormonal mechanisms underlying reproductive drives. Postprint
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- 2014
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43. What is and what could have been: An ERP study on counterfactual comparisons
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Roman Osinsky, Helen Walter, and Johannes Hewig
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Counterfactual thinking ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,General Neuroscience ,Negative Finding ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Negativity effect ,Cognition ,P300 amplitude ,Normal volunteers ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Motivational salience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Neurology ,Valence (psychology) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
Prior research indicates that the feedback-related negativity (FRN) reflects a good versus bad evaluation of decision outcomes, which is insensitive to the local utilitarian relation between chosen and unchosen outcomes. We tested whether this negative finding holds when the chosen outcome has an objective value of zero and therefore a comparison with the unchosen outcome is needed to identify overall choice valence. Participants completed a gambling task in which chosen and unchosen options could result in monetary wins, losses, or breaking even. Results show that the FRN does not reflect local favorableness but rather a dichotomy of gain versus no-gain for both chosen and unchosen outcomes. In contrast, P300 amplitude appears to reflect motivational salience derived from counterfactual comparisons of chosen and unchosen outcomes. Based on our and prior findings, we propose a threefold taxonomy of contextual factors and their relation to the FRN.
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- 2014
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44. Danger and disease: Electrocortical responses to threat- and disgust-eliciting images
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Greg Hajcak Proudfit, Christine A. Rabinak, K. Luan Phan, Michael G. Wheaton, Alexis Holman, and Annmarie MacNamara
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual perception ,Adolescent ,Emotions ,Disease ,Audiology ,Electroencephalography ,Brain mapping ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Physiology (medical) ,Reaction Time ,medicine ,Humans ,Evoked Potentials ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,Negativity effect ,humanities ,Disgust ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Motivational salience ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,Photic Stimulation - Abstract
Previous research suggests facilitated processing of evolutionarily significant stimuli (e.g., depictions of erotica, mutilation, threat), as reflected by augmented event-related potentials (ERPs), including the early posterior negativity (EPN) and late positive potential (LPP). Evolutionary models suggest that images that evoke disgust should be high in motivational salience, but evidence that the EPN and LPP are enhanced by disgusting images is lacking. Prior studies have employed only a small number of disgusting images that were limited in the types of content depicted. In the current study, participants viewed larger sets of disgusting, threatening, and neutral images with more varied content while electroencephalography (EEG) was recorded. Results showed that disgusting and threatening images elicited equivalent LPPs, which were both significantly increased relative to LPPs elicited by neutral images. EPN amplitudes were augmented for both disgusting and threatening relative to neutral images, though significantly more for disgust. These findings offer initial evidence that the EPN and the LPP are sensitive to disgust-eliciting pictures and that these pictures may receive processing that is at least on par with that of threatening images. Limitations of the current study and implications for future research are discussed.
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- 2013
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45. Predicting the reward value of faces and bodies from social perceptions
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Morrison, Danielle, Wang, Hongyi, Hahn, Amanda, Jones, Benedict, and DeBruine, Lisa
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FOS: Psychology ,motivational salience ,Social Psychology ,bodies ,faces ,Psychology ,social perception ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,reward - Abstract
Social judgments of faces are thought to be underpinned by two perceptual components: valence and dominance. Recent work using a standard key-press task to assess reward value found that these valence and dominance components were both positively related to the reward value of faces. Although bodies play an important role in human social interaction, the perceptual dimensions that underpin social judgments of bodies and their relationship to the reward value of bodies are not yet known. The current study investigated these issues. We replicated previous studies showing that valence and dominance underpin social judgments of faces and that both components are positively related to the reward value of faces. By contrast, social judgments of bodies were underpinned by a single component that reflected aspects of both perceived valence and perceived dominance and was positively correlated with the reward value of bodies. These results highlight differences in how observers process faces and bodies.
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- 2017
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46. Role of the Prefrontal Cortex in Addictive Disorders
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Steven R. Laviolette, Walter J. Rushlow, Laura G. Rosen, and Justine Renard
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0301 basic medicine ,Drugs of abuse ,Addiction ,media_common.quotation_subject ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Motivational salience ,Neural system ,Human brain imaging ,Prefrontal cortex ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,media_common - Abstract
The mammalian prefrontal cortex (PFC) serves as a functional nexus point controlling subcortical neural reward and motivational pathways. The process of addiction involves the aberrant amplification of reward signals associated with drugs of abuse and the formation of powerful associative memories linked to the drug-taking experience. Our understanding of how the mammalian PFC regulates subcortical neural reward pathways has revealed remarkable insights into the complexity of addiction-related neuropathological and psychological factors. In this chapter, we review evidence from both animal models of addiction, as well as human brain imaging studies that have identified various functional roles for PFC dysfunction in the etiology and persistence of addiction-related behavioral and neural pathology. Specifically, disturbances in the ability of the PFC to modulate and control subcortical neural systems involved in signaling reward and impulse control may ultimately lead to the aberrant motivational salience, dependence, and chronic relapse associated with drugs of abuse.
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- 2017
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47. Auditory attentional selection is biased by reward cues
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Daniel Västfjäll and Erkin Asutay
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Auditory perception ,Adult ,Male ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Stimulus (physiology) ,050105 experimental psychology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,Auditory attention ,Perception ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,media_common ,Multidisciplinary ,Psykologi (exklusive tillämpad psykologi) ,05 social sciences ,Psychology (excluding Applied Psychology) ,Motivational salience ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Auditory Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Auditory attention theories suggest that humans are able to decompose the complex acoustic input into separate auditory streams, which then compete for attentional resources. How this attentional competition is influenced by motivational salience of sounds is, however, not well-understood. Here, we investigated whether a positive motivational value associated with sounds could bias the attentional selection in an auditory detection task. Participants went through a reward-learning period, where correct attentional selection of one stimulus (CS+) lead to higher rewards compared to another stimulus (CS−). We assessed the impact of reward-learning by comparing perceptual sensitivity before and after the learning period, when CS+ and CS− were presented as distractors for a different target. Performance decreased after reward-learning when CS+ was a distractor, while it increased when CS− was a distractor. Thus, the findings show that sounds that were associated with high rewards captures attention involuntarily. Additionally, when successful inhibition of a particular sound (CS−) was associated with high rewards then it became easier to ignore it. The current findings have important implications for the understanding of the organizing principles of auditory perception and provide, for the first time, clear behavioral evidence for reward-dependent attentional learning in the auditory domain in humans.
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- 2016
48. The neural bases of disgust for cheese: an fMRI study
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Nicolas Torquet, Jean-Pierre Royet, Tao Jiang, Anne-Marie Mouly, David Meunier, Centre de recherche en neurosciences de Lyon (CRNL), Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Université Jean Monnet [Saint-Étienne] (UJM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut des Sciences Cognitives (ISC), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Neuroscience Paris Seine (NPS), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de Biologie Paris Seine (IBPS), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre des Sciences du Goût et de l'Alimentation [Dijon] (CSGA), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-AgroSup Dijon - Institut National Supérieur des Sciences Agronomiques, de l'Alimentation et de l'Environnement-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université de Bourgogne (UB), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut de Biologie Paris Seine (IBPS), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre de recherche en neurosciences de Lyon - Lyon Neuroscience Research Center (CRNL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Université Jean Monnet - Saint-Étienne (UJM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), HAL UPMC, Gestionnaire, Neurosciences Paris Seine (NPS), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Institut de Biologie Paris Seine (IBPS), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université de Bourgogne (UB)-AgroSup Dijon - Institut National Supérieur des Sciences Agronomiques, de l'Alimentation et de l'Environnement-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,liking ,motivational salience ,reward circuit ,media_common.quotation_subject ,disliking ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,disgust ,Substantia nigra ,wanting ,Basal Ganglia ,Developmental psychology ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,Ventral pallidum ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Food Aversion ,Perception ,Basal ganglia ,medicine ,[SDV.NEU] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC] ,External globus pallidus ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,Original Research ,media_common ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,fMRI ,Disgust ,humanities ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,030104 developmental biology ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Neurology ,Taste aversion ,diswanting ,[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC] ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
International audience; The study of food aversion in humans by the induction of illness is ethically unthinkable, and it is difficult to propose a type of food that is disgusting for everybody. However, although cheese is considered edible by most people, it can also be perceived as particularly disgusting to some individuals. As such, the perception of cheese constitutes a good model to study the cerebral processes of food disgust and aversion. In this study, we show that a higher percentage of people are disgusted by cheese than by other types of food. Functional magnetic resonance imaging then reveals that the internal and external globus pallidus and the substantia nigra belonging to the basal ganglia are more activated in participants who dislike or diswant to eat cheese (Anti) than in other participants who like to eat cheese, as revealed following stimulation with cheese odors and pictures. We suggest that the aforementioned basal ganglia structures commonly involved in reward are also involved in the aversive motivated behaviors. Our results further show that the ventral pallidum, a core structure of the reward circuit, is deactivated in Anti subjects stimulated by cheese in the wanting task, highlighting the suppression of motivation-related activation in subjects disgusted by cheese.
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- 2016
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49. The motivational salience of faces is related to both their valence and dominance
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Lisa M. DeBruine, Amanda C. Hahn, Benedict C. Jones, and Hongyi Wang
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Male ,Intelligence ,lcsh:Medicine ,Social Sciences ,Monkeys ,0302 clinical medicine ,Mathematical and Statistical Techniques ,Cognition ,Learning and Memory ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,lcsh:Science ,Mammals ,Principal Component Analysis ,Multidisciplinary ,05 social sciences ,Mate choice ,Vertebrates ,Physical Sciences ,Visual Perception ,Engineering and Technology ,Female ,Cues ,Anatomy ,Macaque ,Statistics (Mathematics) ,Cognitive psychology ,Research Article ,Attractiveness ,Adult ,Primates ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,BF ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Face Recognition ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Memory ,Old World monkeys ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Animals ,Prototypes ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Valence (psychology) ,Statistical Methods ,Motivation ,Behavior ,lcsh:R ,Physical attractiveness ,Organisms ,Cognitive Psychology ,Multiple traits ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Evolutionary psychology ,Motivational salience ,Trustworthiness ,Technology Development ,Face ,Amniotes ,Multivariate Analysis ,Cognitive Science ,lcsh:Q ,Perception ,Head ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Mathematics ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Both behavioral and neural measures of the motivational salience of faces are positively correlated with their physical attractiveness. Whether physical characteristics other than attractiveness contribute to the motivational salience of faces is not known, however. Research with male macaques recently showed that more dominant macaques' faces hold greater motivational salience. Here we investigated whether dominance also contributes to the motivational salience of faces in human participants. Principal component analysis of third-party ratings of faces for multiple traits revealed two orthogonal components. The first component ("valence") was highly correlated with rated trustworthiness and attractiveness. The second component ("dominance") was highly correlated with rated dominance and aggressiveness. Importantly, both components were positively and independently related to the motivational salience of faces, as assessed from responses on a standard key-press task. These results show that at least two dissociable components underpin the motivational salience of faces in humans and present new evidence for similarities in how humans and non-human primates respond to facial cues of dominance.
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- 2016
50. Greater Food Reward Sensitivity is Associated with More Frequent Intake of Discretionary Foods in a Nationally Representative Sample of Young Adults
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Denise L. Haynie, Bruce G. Simons-Morton, Miriam H. Eisenberg, Tonja R. Nansel, Leah M. Lipsky, and Danping Liu
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0301 basic medicine ,young adults ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,eating behaviors ,lcsh:TX341-641 ,Biology ,Added sugar ,Whole grains ,Food group ,03 medical and health sciences ,Reward sensitivity ,food reward responsivity ,Food science ,Young adult ,Original Research ,Nutrition ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Individual susceptibility ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Dietary intake ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Motivational salience ,food reward sensitivity ,dietary intake ,lcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,Food Science - Abstract
Food reward sensitivity may influence individual susceptibility to an environment replete with highly palatable foods of minimal nutritional value. These foods contain combinations of added sugar, fat, and/or salt that may enhance their motivational salience. This study examined associations of food reward sensitivity with eating behaviors in the NEXT Generation Health Study, a nationally representative sample of U.S. young adults. Participants (n = 2202) completed self-report measures including the Power of Food Scale, assessing food reward sensitivity, and intake frequency of 14 food groups. Multiple linear regressions estimated associations of food reward sensitivity with each of the eating behaviors adjusting for covariates. Higher food reward sensitivity was associated with more frequent intake of fast food (b ± linearized SE = 0.24 ± 0.05, p
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- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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