Berns Gregory S, Chappelow Jonathan, Cekic Milos, Zink Caroline F, Pagnoni Giuseppe, Martin-Skurski Megan E
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Emory University School of Medicine, 101 Woodruff Circle, Suite 4000, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Science. 2006 May 5;312(5774):754-8. doi: 10.1126/science.1123721.
Given the choice of waiting for an adverse outcome or getting it over with quickly, many people choose the latter. Theoretical models of decision-making have assumed that this occurs because there is a cost to waiting-i.e., dread. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we measured the neural responses to waiting for a cutaneous electric shock. Some individuals dreaded the outcome so much that, when given a choice, they preferred to receive more voltage rather than wait. Even when no decision was required, these extreme dreaders were distinguishable from those who dreaded mildly by the rate of increase of neural activity in the posterior elements of the cortical pain matrix. This suggests that dread derives, in part, from the attention devoted to the expected physical response and not simply from fear or anxiety. Although these differences were observed during a passive waiting procedure, they correlated with individual behavior in a subsequent choice paradigm, providing evidence for a neurobiological link between the experienced disutility of dread and subsequent decisions about unpleasant outcomes.
在面临等待不良结果还是迅速结束的选择时,许多人会选择后者。决策的理论模型假定这种情况的发生是因为等待存在成本——即恐惧。我们使用功能磁共振成像技术,测量了对等待皮肤电击的神经反应。一些人非常惧怕这种结果,以至于在面临选择时,他们宁愿接受更高的电压也不愿等待。即使无需做出决策,通过皮质疼痛矩阵后部元素中神经活动的增加速率,这些极度惧怕者也能与轻度惧怕者区分开来。这表明,恐惧部分源于对预期身体反应的关注,而不仅仅是恐惧或焦虑。尽管这些差异是在被动等待过程中观察到的,但它们与随后选择范式中的个体行为相关,为恐惧带来的体验性负效用与随后关于不愉快结果的决策之间的神经生物学联系提供了证据。