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1.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res ; 46(5): 749-758, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35307836

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Impaired decision making, a key characteristic of alcohol dependence (AD), manifests in continuous alcohol consumption despite severe negative consequences. The neural basis of this impairment in individuals with AD and differences with known neural decision mechanisms among healthy subjects are not fully understood. In particular, it is unclear whether the choice behavior among individuals with AD is based on a general impairment of decision mechanisms or is mainly explained by altered value attribution, with an overly high subjective value attributed to alcohol-related stimuli. METHODS: Here, we use a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) monetary reward task to compare the neural processes of model-based decision making and value computation between AD individuals (n = 32) and healthy controls (n = 32). During fMRI, participants evaluated monetary offers with respect to dynamically changing constraints and different levels of uncertainty. RESULTS: Individuals with AD showed lower activation associated with model-based decision processes in the caudate nucleus than controls, but there were no group differences in value-related neural activity or task performance. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings highlight the role of the caudate nucleus in impaired model-based decisions of alcohol-dependent individuals.


Subject(s)
Alcoholism , Caudate Nucleus , Alcoholism/diagnostic imaging , Caudate Nucleus/diagnostic imaging , Decision Making/physiology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Reward
2.
Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci ; 17(7): 683-693, 2022 07 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34850226

ABSTRACT

Studies in decision neuroscience have identified robust neural representations for the value of choice options. However, overall values often depend on multiple attributes, and it is not well understood how the brain evaluates different attributes and integrates them to combined values. In particular, it is not clear whether attribute values are computed in distinct attribute-specific regions or within the general valuation network known to process overall values. Here, we used a functional magnetic resonance imaging choice task in which abstract stimuli had to be evaluated based on variations of the attributes color and motion. The behavioral data showed that participants responded faster when overall values were high and attribute value differences were low. On the neural level, we did not find that attribute values were systematically represented in areas V4 and V5, even though these regions are associated with attribute-specific processing of color and motion, respectively. Instead, attribute values were associated with activity in the posterior cingulate cortex, ventral striatum and posterior inferior temporal gyrus. Furthermore, overall values were represented in dorsolateral and ventromedial prefrontal cortex, and attribute value differences in dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, which suggests that these regions play a key role for the neural integration of attribute values.


Subject(s)
Brain Mapping , Decision Making , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Neural Networks, Computer , Prefrontal Cortex
4.
Hum Brain Mapp ; 36(4): 1585-94, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25529748

ABSTRACT

Patients with striate cortex lesions experience visual perception loss in the contralateral visual field. In few patients, however, stimuli within the blind field can lead to unconscious (blindsight) or even conscious perception when the stimuli are moving (Riddoch syndrome). Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we investigated the neural responses elicited by motion stimulation in the sighted and blind visual fields of eight patients with lesions of the striate cortex. Importantly, repeated testing ensured that none of the patients exhibited blindsight or a Riddoch syndrome. Three patients had additional lesions in the ipsilesional pulvinar. For blind visual field stimulation, great care was given that the moving stimulus was precisely presented within the borders of the scotoma. In six of eight patients, the stimulation within the scotoma elicited hemodynamic activity in area human middle temporal (hMT) while no activity was observed within the ipsilateral lesioned area of the striate cortex. One of the two patients in whom no ipsilesional activity was observed had an extensive lesion including massive subcortical damage. The other patient had an additional focal lesion within the lateral inferior pulvinar. Fiber-tracking based on anatomical and functional markers (hMT and Pulvinar) on individual diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) data from each patient revealed the structural integrity of subcortical pathways in all but the patient with the extensive subcortical lesion. These results provide clear evidence for the robustness of direct subcortical pathways from the pulvinar to area hMT in patients with striate cortex lesions and demonstrate that ipsilesional activity in area hMT is completely independent of conscious perception.


Subject(s)
Motion Perception/physiology , Perceptual Disorders/physiopathology , Pulvinar/physiopathology , Vision Disorders/physiopathology , Visual Cortex/physiopathology , Adult , Aged , Awareness , Brain Mapping , Cerebrovascular Circulation/physiology , Diffusion Tensor Imaging , Female , Functional Laterality , Humans , Infarction, Posterior Cerebral Artery/complications , Infarction, Posterior Cerebral Artery/pathology , Infarction, Posterior Cerebral Artery/physiopathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Perceptual Disorders/etiology , Perceptual Disorders/pathology , Photic Stimulation/methods , Pulvinar/pathology , Vision Disorders/etiology , Vision Disorders/pathology , Visual Cortex/pathology , Visual Fields , Visual Pathways/pathology , Visual Pathways/physiopathology , Young Adult
5.
Cereb Cortex ; 25(9): 2828-41, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24770709

ABSTRACT

Feature attention operates in a spatially global way, with attended feature values being prioritized for selection outside the focus of attention. Accounts of global feature attention have emphasized feature competition as a determining factor. Here, we use magnetoencephalographic recordings in humans to test whether competition is critical for global feature selection to arise. Subjects performed a color/shape discrimination task in one visual field (VF), while irrelevant color probes were presented in the other unattended VF. Global effects of color attention were assessed by analyzing the response to the probe as a function of whether or not the probe's color was a target-defining color. We find that global color selection involves a sequence of modulations in extrastriate cortex, with an initial phase in higher tier areas (lateral occipital complex) followed by a later phase in lower tier retinotopic areas (V3/V4). Importantly, these modulations appeared with and without color competition in the focus of attention. Moreover, early parts of the modulation emerged for a task-relevant color not even present in the focus of attention. All modulations, however, were eliminated during simple onset-detection of the colored target. These results indicate that global color-based attention depends on target discrimination independent of feature competition in the focus of attention.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Brain Mapping , Choice Behavior/physiology , Color Perception/physiology , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Visual Cortex/physiology , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Electroencephalography , Female , Fourier Analysis , Functional Laterality , Humans , Magnetoencephalography , Male , Motion Perception/physiology , Photic Stimulation , Reaction Time/physiology , Visual Fields , Visual Pathways/physiology , Young Adult
6.
BMC Neurosci ; 15: 78, 2014 Jun 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24947161

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Graph-based analysis of fMRI data has recently emerged as a promising approach to study brain networks. Based on the assessment of synchronous fMRI activity at separate brain sites, functional connectivity graphs are constructed and analyzed using graph-theoretical concepts. Most previous studies investigated region-level graphs, which are computationally inexpensive, but bring along the problem of choosing sensible regions and involve blurring of more detailed information. In contrast, voxel-level graphs provide the finest granularity attainable from the data, enabling analyses at superior spatial resolution. They are, however, associated with considerable computational demands, which can render high-resolution analyses infeasible. In response, many existing studies investigating functional connectivity at the voxel-level reduced the computational burden by sacrificing spatial resolution. METHODS: Here, a novel, time-efficient method for graph construction is presented that retains the original spatial resolution. Performance gains are instead achieved through data reduction in the temporal domain based on dichotomization of voxel time series combined with tetrachoric correlation estimation and efficient implementation. RESULTS: By comparison with graph construction based on Pearson's r, the technique used by the majority of previous studies, we find that the novel approach produces highly similar results an order of magnitude faster. CONCLUSIONS: Its demonstrated performance makes the proposed approach a sensible and efficient alternative to customary practice. An open source software package containing the created programs is freely available for download.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Brain/physiology , Connectome/methods , Data Compression/methods , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Models, Neurological , Computer Simulation , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
7.
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci ; 14(2): 593-609, 2014 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24448735

ABSTRACT

Response inhibition is an important cognitive-control function that allows for already-initiated or habitual behavioral responses to be promptly withheld when needed. A typical paradigm to study this function is the stop-signal task. From this task, the stop-signal response time (SSRT) can be derived, which indexes how rapidly an already-initiated response can be canceled. Typically, SSRTs range around 200 ms, identifying response inhibition as a particularly rapid cognitive-control process. Even so, it has recently been shown that SSRTs can be further accelerated if successful response inhibition is rewarded. Since this earlier study effectively ruled out differential preparatory (proactive) control adjustments, the reward benefits likely relied on boosted reactive control. Yet, given how rapidly such control processes would need to be enhanced, alternative explanations circumventing reactive control are important to consider. We addressed this question with an fMRI study by gauging the overlap of the brain networks associated with reward-related and response-inhibition-related processes in a reward-modulated stop-signal task. In line with the view that reactive control can indeed be boosted swiftly by reward availability, we found that the activity in key brain areas related to response inhibition was enhanced for reward-related stop trials. Furthermore, we observed that this beneficial reward effect was triggered by enhanced connectivity between task-unspecific (reward-related) and task-specific (inhibition-related) areas in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). The present data hence suggest that reward information can be translated very rapidly into behavioral benefits (here, within ~200 ms) through enhanced reactive control, underscoring the immediate responsiveness of such control processes to reward availability in general.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Discrimination, Psychological/physiology , Inhibition, Psychological , Reaction Time/physiology , Reward , Brain/blood supply , Brain Mapping , Female , Functional Laterality , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Oxygen/blood , Young Adult
8.
J Cogn Neurosci ; 26(1): 28-40, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23915053

ABSTRACT

Human observers can readily track up to four independently moving items simultaneously, even in the presence of moving distractors. Here we combined EEG and magnetoencephalography recordings to investigate the neural processes underlying this remarkable capability. Participants were instructed to track four of eight independently moving items for 3 sec. When the movement ceased a probe stimulus consisting of four items with a higher luminance was presented. The location of the probe items could correspond fully, partly, or not at all with the tracked items. Participants reported whether the probe items fully matched the tracked items or not. About half of the participants showed slower RTs and higher error rates with increasing correspondence between tracked items and the probe. The other half, however, showed faster RTs and lower error rates when the probe fully matched the tracked items. This latter behavioral pattern was associated with enhanced probe-evoked neural activity that was localized to the lateral occipital cortex in the time range 170-210 msec. This enhanced response in the object-selective lateral occipital cortex suggested that these participants performed the tracking task by visualizing the overall shape configuration defined by the vertices of the tracked items, thereby producing a behavioral advantage on full-match trials. In a later time range (270-310 msec) probe-evoked neural activity increased monotonically as a function of decreasing target-probe correspondence in all participants. This later modulation, localized to superior parietal cortex, was proposed to reflect the degree of mismatch between the probe and the automatically formed visual STM representation of the tracked items.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Brain/physiology , Magnetoencephalography/methods , Motion Perception/physiology , Photic Stimulation/methods , Reaction Time/physiology , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Time Factors , Young Adult
9.
J Neurosci ; 32(44): 15284-95, 2012 Oct 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23115167

ABSTRACT

Feature-based attention is known to operate in a spatially global manner, in that the selection of attended features is not bound to the spatial focus of attention. Here we used electromagnetic recordings in human observers to characterize the spatiotemporal signature of such global selection of an orientation feature. Observers performed a simple orientation-discrimination task while ignoring task-irrelevant orientation probes outside the focus of attention. We observed that global feature-based selection, indexed by the brain response to unattended orientation probes, is composed of separable functional components. One such component reflects global selection based on the similarity of the probe with task-relevant orientation values ("template matching"), which is followed by a component reflecting selection based on the similarity of the probe with the orientation value under discrimination in the focus of attention ("discrimination matching"). Importantly, template matching occurs at ∼150 ms after stimulus onset, ∼80 ms before the onset of discrimination matching. Moreover, source activity underlying template matching and discrimination matching was found to originate from ventral extrastriate cortex, with the former being generated in more anterolateral and the latter in more posteromedial parts, suggesting template matching to occur in visual cortex higher up in the visual processing hierarchy than discrimination matching. We take these observations to indicate that the population-level signature of global feature-based selection reflects a sequence of hierarchically ordered operations in extrastriate visual cortex, in which the selection based on task relevance has temporal priority over the selection based on the sensory similarity between input representations.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Adult , Brain Mapping , Cerebral Cortex/cytology , Electroencephalography , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Female , Humans , Magnetoencephalography , Male , Occipital Lobe/cytology , Occipital Lobe/physiology , Orientation/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Photic Stimulation , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Reaction Time/physiology , Temporal Lobe/cytology , Temporal Lobe/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Young Adult
10.
Cognition ; 125(3): 498-503, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22921189

ABSTRACT

Reward prospect has been demonstrated to facilitate various cognitive and behavioral operations, particularly by enhancing the speed and vigor of processes linked to approaching reward. Studies in this domain typically employed task regimes in which participants' overt responses are facilitated by prospective rewards. In contrast, we demonstrate here that even the cancellation of a motor response can be accelerated by reward prospect, thus signifying reward-related benefits on restraint rather than approach behavior. Importantly, this facilitation occurred independent of strategy-related adjustments of response speed, which are known to systematically distort the estimation of response-cancellation speed. The fact that motivational factors can indeed facilitate response inhibition is not only relevant for understanding how motivation and response inhibition interact in healthy participants but also for work on various patient groups that display response-inhibition deficits, suggesting that core differences in the ability to inhibit motor responses have to be differentiated from motivational factors.


Subject(s)
Inhibition, Psychological , Motivation , Reward , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Psychomotor Performance , Reaction Time
11.
J Neurosci ; 31(13): 4955-61, 2011 Mar 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21451034

ABSTRACT

Dopamine release in cortical and subcortical structures plays a central role in reward-related neural processes. Within this context, dopaminergic inputs are commonly assumed to play an activating role, facilitating behavioral and cognitive operations necessary to obtain a prospective reward. Here, we provide evidence from human fMRI that this activating role can also be mediated by task-demand-related processes and thus extends beyond situations that only entail extrinsic motivating factors. Using a visual discrimination task in which varying levels of task demands were precued, we found enhanced hemodynamic activity in the substantia nigra (SN) for high task demands in the absence of reward or similar extrinsic motivating factors. This observation thus indicates that the SN can also be activated in an endogenous fashion. In parallel to its role in reward-related processes, reward-independent activation likely serves to recruit the processing resources needed to meet enhanced task demands. Simultaneously, activity in a wide network of cortical and subcortical control regions was enhanced in response to high task demands, whereas areas of the default-mode network were deactivated more strongly. The present observations suggest that the SN represents a core node within a broader neural network that adjusts the amount of available neural and behavioral resources to changing situational opportunities and task requirements, which is often driven by extrinsic factors but can also be controlled endogenously.


Subject(s)
Dopamine/physiology , Mesencephalon/physiology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Reward , Weight-Bearing/physiology , Adult , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Nerve Net/physiology , Photic Stimulation/methods , Young Adult
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