Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, 3811 O'Hara Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, 3811 O'Hara Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA.
Psychiatry Res. 2014 Oct 30;224(1):22-7. doi: 10.1016/j.pscychresns.2014.07.005. Epub 2014 Jul 21.
Human and animal studies indicate that reward function is modulated by the circadian clock that governs our daily sleep/wake rhythm. For example, a robust circadian rhythm exists in positive affect, which is lower in the morning hours and peaks in the afternoon. A handful of functional neuroimaging studies suggest that systematic diurnal variation exists in brain activity related to other functions, but no published human studies have examined daily variation in the neural processing of reward. In the present study, we attempt to advance this literature by using functional neuroimaging methods to examine time-of-day changes in the responsivity of the reward circuit. Using a within-person design and a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) monetary reward task, we compared morning and afternoon reward-related brain activation in a sample of healthy young adults within 24h. Region of interest analyses focused on the striatum, and we hypothesized greater reward activation in the afternoon, concordant with the circadian peak in positive affect. Results were consistent with our hypothesis. In addition, we counterbalanced the order of morning and afternoon scans in order to explore the short-term stability of the neural response. Whole-brain analyses showed a markedly higher reactivity to reward throughout the brain in the first scan relative to the second scan, consistent with habituation to the monetary reward stimuli. However, these effects did not appear to explain the time-of-day findings. In summary, we report the first preliminary evidence of circadian variation in the neural processing of reward. These findings have both methodological and theoretical implications.
人体和动物研究表明,奖励功能受调节的生物钟,控制我们的日常睡眠/觉醒节律。例如,一个强大的昼夜节律存在于积极的影响,这是在早上较低,并在下午达到峰值。少数功能神经影像学研究表明,存在与其他功能相关的大脑活动的系统的昼夜变化,但没有发表的人类研究已经检查了奖励的神经处理的日常变化。在本研究中,我们试图通过使用功能神经影像学方法来研究奖励回路的反应性的时间变化来推进这一文献。使用个体内设计和功能磁共振成像(fMRI)货币奖励任务,我们比较了在 24 小时内的健康年轻成年人的早晨和下午的奖励相关的大脑激活。重点区域的分析集中在纹状体上,我们假设下午有更大的奖励激活,与积极影响的昼夜高峰一致。结果与我们的假设一致。此外,我们平衡了早晨和下午扫描的顺序,以探索神经反应的短期稳定性。全脑分析表明,在第一次扫描中,整个大脑对奖励的反应性明显高于第二次扫描,这与对金钱奖励刺激的习惯化一致。然而,这些影响似乎并没有解释时间的发现。总之,我们报告了奖励的神经处理中昼夜变化的第一个初步证据。这些发现既有方法学上的,也有理论上的意义。