May J Christopher, Delgado Mauricio R, Dahl Ronald E, Stenger V Andrew, Ryan Neal D, Fiez Julie A, Carter Cameron S
Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, NY, USA.
Biol Psychiatry. 2004 Feb 15;55(4):359-66. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2003.11.008.
Functional disturbances in reward-related brain systems are thought to play a role in the development of mood, impulse, and substance-abuse disorders. Studies in nonhuman primates have identified brain regions, including the dorsal/ventral striatum and orbital-frontal cortex, in which neural activity is modulated by reward. Recent studies in adults have concurred with these findings by observing reward-contingent blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) responses in these regions during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) paradigms; however, no previous studies indicate whether comparable modulations of neural activity exist in the brain reward systems of children and adolescents.
We used event-related fMRI and a behavioral paradigm modeled on previous work in adults to study brain responses to monetary gains and losses in psychiatrically healthy children and adolescents as part of a program examining the neural substrates of anxiety and depression in youth.
Regions and time-courses of reward-related activity were similar to those observed in adults with condition-dependent BOLD changes in the ventral striatum and lateral and medial orbital-frontal cortex; specifically, these regions showed larger responses to positive than to negative feedback.
These results provide further evidence for the value of event-related fMRI in examining reward systems of the brain, demonstrate the feasibility of this approach in children and adolescents, and establish a baseline from which to understand the pathophysiology of reward-related psychiatric disorders in youth.
与奖赏相关的脑系统功能紊乱被认为在情绪、冲动及物质滥用障碍的发生发展中起作用。对非人类灵长类动物的研究已确定了包括背侧/腹侧纹状体及眶额皮质在内的脑区,其中神经活动受奖赏调节。近期针对成年人的研究通过在功能磁共振成像(fMRI)范式中观察这些区域的奖赏依赖血氧水平依赖(BOLD)反应,证实了这些发现;然而,此前尚无研究表明儿童及青少年的脑奖赏系统中是否存在类似的神经活动调节。
我们使用事件相关fMRI及基于此前对成年人研究的行为范式,作为一项探究青少年焦虑和抑郁神经基础项目的一部分,研究精神健康的儿童及青少年对金钱得失的脑反应。
奖赏相关活动的区域和时间进程与在成年人中观察到的相似,腹侧纹状体以及外侧和内侧眶额皮质的BOLD变化取决于条件;具体而言,这些区域对正性反馈的反应大于对负性反馈的反应。
这些结果为事件相关fMRI在研究脑奖赏系统方面的价值提供了进一步证据,证明了该方法在儿童及青少年中的可行性,并建立了一个基线,以便理解青少年奖赏相关精神障碍的病理生理学。