Moutsiana Christina, Charpentier Caroline J, Garrett Neil, Cohen Michael X, Sharot Tali
Affective Brain Laboratory, Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, London, WC1H 0AP, United Kingdom,
Affective Brain Laboratory, Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, London, WC1H 0AP, United Kingdom, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London, WC1N 3AR, United Kingdom, and.
J Neurosci. 2015 Oct 21;35(42):14077-85. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1120-15.2015.
How humans integrate information to form beliefs about reality is a question that has engaged scientists for centuries, yet the biological system supporting this process is not well understood. One of the most salient attributes of information is valence. Whether a piece of news is good or bad is critical in determining whether it will alter our beliefs. Here, we reveal a frontal-subcortical circuit in the left hemisphere that is simultaneously associated with enhanced integration of favorable information into beliefs and impaired integration of unfavorable information. Specifically, for favorable information, stronger white matter connectivity within this system, particularly between the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and left subcortical regions (including the amygdala, hippocampus, thalamus, putamen, and pallidum), as well as insular cortex, is associated with greater change in belief. However, for unfavorable information, stronger connectivity within this system, particularly between the left IFG and left pallidum, putamen, and insular cortex, is associated with reduced change in beliefs. These novel results are consistent with models suggesting that partially separable processes govern learning from favorable and unfavorable information.
Beliefs of what may happen in the future are important, because they guide decisions and actions. Here, we illuminate how structural brain connectivity is related to the generation of subjective beliefs. We focus on how the valence of information is related to people's tendency to alter their beliefs. By quantifying the extent to which participants update their beliefs in response to desirable and undesirable information and relating those measures to the strength of white matter connectivity using diffusion tensor imaging, we characterize a left frontal-subcortical system that is associated simultaneously with greater belief updating in response to favorable information and reduced belief updating in response to unfavorable information. This neural architecture may allow valence to be incorporated into belief updating.
几个世纪以来,人类如何整合信息以形成对现实的信念一直是科学家们关注的问题,但支持这一过程的生物系统仍未得到充分理解。信息最显著的属性之一是效价。一条新闻是好是坏对于决定它是否会改变我们的信念至关重要。在这里,我们揭示了左半球的一个额-皮质下回路,它同时与将有利信息更好地整合到信念中以及不利信息整合受损有关。具体而言,对于有利信息,该系统内更强的白质连通性,特别是左额下回(IFG)与左皮质下区域(包括杏仁核、海马体、丘脑、壳核和苍白球)以及岛叶皮质之间的连通性,与信念的更大变化相关。然而,对于不利信息,该系统内更强的连通性,特别是左IFG与左苍白球、壳核和岛叶皮质之间的连通性,与信念变化的减少相关。这些新结果与表明部分可分离的过程支配从有利和不利信息中学习的模型一致。
对未来可能发生之事的信念很重要,因为它们指导决策和行动。在这里,我们阐明了大脑结构连通性与主观信念的产生之间的关系。我们关注信息的效价如何与人们改变信念的倾向相关。通过量化参与者根据期望和不期望的信息更新信念的程度,并使用扩散张量成像将这些测量结果与白质连通性的强度相关联,我们描绘了一个左额-皮质下系统,它同时与对有利信息的更大信念更新以及对不利信息的减少信念更新相关。这种神经结构可能允许效价被纳入信念更新。