Behavioural Brain Sciences, School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, B15 2TT United Kingdom.
J Neurosci. 2013 Feb 27;33(9):3981-8. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1294-12.2013.
Action selection describes the high-level process that selects between competing movements. In animals, behavioral variability is critical for the motor exploration required to select the action that optimizes reward and minimizes cost/punishment and is guided by dopamine (DA). The aim of this study was to test in humans whether low-level movement parameters are affected by punishment and reward in ways similar to high-level action selection. Moreover, we addressed the proposed dependence of behavioral and neurophysiological variability on DA and whether this may underpin the exploration of kinematic parameters. Participants performed an out-and-back index finger movement and were instructed that monetary reward and punishment were based on its maximal acceleration (MA). In fact, the feedback was not contingent on the participant's behavior but predetermined. Blocks highly biased toward punishment were associated with increased MA variability relative to blocks either with reward or without feedback. This increase in behavioral variability was positively correlated with neurophysiological variability, as measured by changes in corticospinal excitability with transcranial magnetic stimulation over the primary motor cortex. Following the administration of a DA antagonist, the variability associated with punishment diminished and the correlation between behavioral and neurophysiological variability no longer existed. Similar changes in variability were not observed when participants executed a predetermined MA, nor did DA influence resting neurophysiological variability. Thus, under conditions of punishment, DA-dependent processes influence the selection of low-level movement parameters. We propose that the enhanced behavioral variability reflects the exploration of kinematic parameters for less punishing, or conversely more rewarding, outcomes.
动作选择描述了在竞争动作之间进行选择的高层过程。在动物中,行为可变性对于进行运动探索至关重要,这是选择能最大化奖励、最小化成本/惩罚的动作所必需的,而这一过程受到多巴胺(DA)的指导。本研究的目的是在人类中测试,低水平的运动参数是否会以类似于高级动作选择的方式受到惩罚和奖励的影响。此外,我们探讨了行为和神经生理可变性对 DA 的依赖性,以及这是否可能是运动学参数探索的基础。参与者执行向外-返回食指运动,并被告知货币奖励和惩罚取决于其最大加速度(MA)。事实上,反馈并不是基于参与者的行为,而是预先确定的。高度偏向于惩罚的区块与增加的 MA 可变性相关,而不是奖励或没有反馈的区块。这种行为可变性的增加与神经生理可变性呈正相关,这是通过经颅磁刺激在初级运动皮层上测量的皮质脊髓兴奋性变化来衡量的。在给予 DA 拮抗剂后,与惩罚相关的可变性减小,行为和神经生理可变性之间的相关性不再存在。当参与者执行预定的 MA 时,并没有观察到可变性的类似变化,也没有观察到 DA 影响静息神经生理可变性。因此,在惩罚条件下,依赖 DA 的过程会影响低水平运动参数的选择。我们提出,增强的行为可变性反映了对运动学参数的探索,以获得更少惩罚或更有利可图的结果。