Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
PLoS One. 2012;7(12):e51637. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0051637. Epub 2012 Dec 19.
Cognitive control is a fundamental skill reflecting the active use of task-rules to guide behavior and suppress inappropriate automatic responses. Prior work has traditionally used paradigms in which subjects are told when to engage cognitive control. Thus, surprisingly little is known about the factors that influence individuals' initial decision of whether or not to act in a reflective, rule-based manner. To examine this, we took three classic cognitive control tasks (Stroop, Wisconsin Card Sorting Task, Go/No-Go task) and created novel 'free-choice' versions in which human subjects were free to select an automatic, pre-potent action, or an action requiring rule-based cognitive control, and earned varying amounts of money based on their choices. Our findings demonstrated that subjects' decision to engage cognitive control was driven by an explicit representation of monetary rewards expected to be obtained from rule-use. Subjects rarely engaged cognitive control when the expected outcome was of equal or lesser value as compared to the value of the automatic response, but frequently engaged cognitive control when it was expected to yield a larger monetary outcome. Additionally, we exploited fMRI-adaptation to show that the lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) represents associations between rules and expected reward outcomes. Together, these findings suggest that individuals are more likely to act in a reflective, rule-based manner when they expect that it will result in a desired outcome. Thus, choosing to exert cognitive control is not simply a matter of reason and willpower, but rather, conforms to standard mechanisms of value-based decision making. Finally, in contrast to current models of LPFC function, our results suggest that the LPFC plays a direct role in representing motivational incentives.
认知控制是一种基本技能,反映了主动使用任务规则来指导行为和抑制不当的自动反应。先前的工作传统上使用的范式是,当被试被告知何时进行认知控制。因此,人们对影响个体最初决定是否以反思性、基于规则的方式行事的因素知之甚少。为了研究这一点,我们采用了三种经典的认知控制任务(Stroop、威斯康星卡片分类任务、Go/No-Go 任务),并创建了新颖的“自由选择”版本,在这些版本中,人类被试可以自由选择自动的、预先存在的反应,或需要基于规则的认知控制的反应,并根据他们的选择获得不同数量的金钱。我们的研究结果表明,被试是否进行认知控制的决定取决于对从规则使用中获得的预期金钱奖励的明确表示。当预期的结果与自动反应的价值相等或更小时,被试很少进行认知控制,但当预期会产生更大的金钱结果时,他们经常进行认知控制。此外,我们利用 fMRI 适应来表明外侧前额叶皮层(LPFC)代表了规则和预期奖励结果之间的关联。总的来说,这些发现表明,当个体预期这将导致他们想要的结果时,他们更有可能以反思性、基于规则的方式行事。因此,选择施加认知控制不仅仅是理性和意志力的问题,而是符合基于价值的决策的标准机制。最后,与当前的 LPFC 功能模型相反,我们的研究结果表明,LPFC 在代表动机激励方面起着直接作用。