Seymour Ben, O'Doherty John P, Koltzenburg Martin, Wiech Katja, Frackowiak Richard, Friston Karl, Dolan Raymond
Wellcome Department of Imaging Neuroscience, 12 Queen Square, London WC1N 3BG, UK.
Nat Neurosci. 2005 Sep;8(9):1234-40. doi: 10.1038/nn1527. Epub 2005 Aug 21.
Termination of a painful or unpleasant event can be rewarding. However, whether the brain treats relief in a similar way as it treats natural reward is unclear, and the neural processes that underlie its representation as a motivational goal remain poorly understood. We used fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) to investigate how humans learn to generate expectations of pain relief. Using a pavlovian conditioning procedure, we show that subjects experiencing prolonged experimentally induced pain can be conditioned to predict pain relief. This proceeds in a manner consistent with contemporary reward-learning theory (average reward/loss reinforcement learning), reflected by neural activity in the amygdala and midbrain. Furthermore, these reward-like learning signals are mirrored by opposite aversion-like signals in lateral orbitofrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex. This dual coding has parallels to 'opponent process' theories in psychology and promotes a formal account of prediction and expectation during pain.
终止痛苦或不愉快的事件会带来奖赏。然而,大脑对缓解的处理方式是否与对自然奖赏的处理方式类似尚不清楚,而将缓解表征为动机目标背后的神经过程仍知之甚少。我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来研究人类如何学会产生对疼痛缓解的期望。通过巴甫洛夫条件反射程序,我们发现经历长时间实验诱导疼痛的受试者可以被条件化以预测疼痛缓解。这一过程与当代奖赏学习理论(平均奖赏/损失强化学习)一致,表现为杏仁核和中脑的神经活动。此外,这些类似奖赏的学习信号在外侧眶额皮质和前扣带回皮质中被相反的类似厌恶的信号所镜像。这种双重编码与心理学中的“对手过程”理论相似,并促进了对疼痛期间预测和期望的形式化解释。