van den Berg Berry, Krebs Ruth M, Lorist Monicque M, Woldorff Marty G
Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Box 90999, Durham, NC, 27708-0999, USA,
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2014 Jun;14(2):561-77. doi: 10.3758/s13415-014-0281-z.
The prospect of gaining money is an incentive widely at play in the real world. Such monetary motivation might have particularly strong influence when the cognitive system is challenged, such as when needing to process conflicting stimulus inputs. Here, we employed manipulations of reward-prospect and attentional-preparation levels in a cued-Stroop stimulus conflict task, along with the high temporal resolution of electrical brain recordings, to provide insight into the mechanisms by which reward-prospect and attention interact and modulate cognitive task performance. In this task, the cue indicated whether or not the participant needed to prepare for an upcoming Stroop stimulus and, if so, whether there was the potential for monetary reward (dependent on performance on that trial). Both cued attention and cued reward-prospect enhanced preparatory neural activity, as reflected by increases in the hallmark attention-related negative-polarity ERP slow wave (contingent negative variation [CNV]) and reductions in oscillatory Alpha activity, which was followed by enhanced processing of the subsequent Stroop stimulus. In addition, similar modulations of preparatory neural activity (larger CNVs and reduced Alpha) predicted shorter versus longer response times (RTs) to the subsequent target stimulus, consistent with such modulations reflecting trial-to-trial variations in attention. Particularly striking were the individual differences in the utilization of reward-prospect information. In particular, the size of the reward effects on the preparatory neural activity correlated across participants with the degree to which reward-prospect both facilitated overall task performance (shorter RTs) and reduced conflict-related behavioral interference. Thus, the prospect of reward appears to recruit attentional preparation circuits to enhance processing of task-relevant target information.
获得金钱的前景是现实世界中广泛存在的一种激励因素。当认知系统受到挑战时,例如需要处理相互冲突的刺激输入时,这种金钱激励可能会产生特别强烈的影响。在这里,我们在一个线索性斯特鲁普刺激冲突任务中,对奖励预期和注意力准备水平进行了操纵,并结合高时间分辨率的脑电记录,以深入了解奖励预期和注意力相互作用并调节认知任务表现的机制。在这个任务中,线索表明参与者是否需要为即将到来的斯特鲁普刺激做好准备,如果需要,是否有获得金钱奖励的可能性(取决于该试验的表现)。线索性注意力和线索性奖励预期都增强了准备性神经活动,这表现为标志性的与注意力相关的负向ERP慢波(关联性负变[CNV])增加以及振荡性阿尔法活动减少,随后对后续斯特鲁普刺激的处理得到增强。此外,准备性神经活动的类似调制(更大的CNV和减少的阿尔法)预示着对后续目标刺激的反应时间(RT)更短与更长,这与这种调制反映了逐次试验中注意力的变化一致。特别引人注目的是奖励预期信息利用方面的个体差异。具体而言,奖励对准备性神经活动的影响大小在参与者之间与奖励预期促进整体任务表现(更短的RT)以及减少与冲突相关的行为干扰的程度相关。因此,奖励预期似乎会招募注意力准备回路来增强对与任务相关的目标信息的处理。