Murty Vishnu P, LaBar Kevin S, Adcock R Alison
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, United States.
Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, United States; Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, United States.
Neurobiol Learn Mem. 2016 Oct;134 Pt A(Pt A):55-64. doi: 10.1016/j.nlm.2016.01.018. Epub 2016 Feb 5.
Adaptive motivated behavior requires predictive internal representations of the environment, and surprising events are indications for encoding new representations of the environment. The medial temporal lobe memory system, including the hippocampus and surrounding cortex, encodes surprising events and is influenced by motivational state. Because behavior reflects the goals of an individual, we investigated whether motivational valence (i.e., pursuing rewards versus avoiding punishments) also impacts neural and mnemonic encoding of surprising events. During functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), participants encountered perceptually unexpected events either during the pursuit of rewards or avoidance of punishments. Despite similar levels of motivation across groups, reward and punishment facilitated the processing of surprising events in different medial temporal lobe regions. Whereas during reward motivation, perceptual surprises enhanced activation in the hippocampus, during punishment motivation surprises instead enhanced activation in parahippocampal cortex. Further, we found that reward motivation facilitated hippocampal coupling with ventromedial PFC, whereas punishment motivation facilitated parahippocampal cortical coupling with orbitofrontal cortex. Behaviorally, post-scan testing revealed that reward, but not punishment, motivation resulted in greater memory selectivity for surprising events encountered during goal pursuit. Together these findings demonstrate that neuromodulatory systems engaged by anticipation of reward and punishment target separate components of the medial temporal lobe, modulating medial temporal lobe sensitivity and connectivity. Thus, reward and punishment motivation yield distinct neural contexts for learning, with distinct consequences for how surprises are incorporated into predictive mnemonic models of the environment.
适应性动机行为需要对环境进行预测性的内部表征,而意外事件是编码新的环境表征的指示。内侧颞叶记忆系统,包括海马体和周围皮层,对意外事件进行编码,并受动机状态的影响。由于行为反映了个体的目标,我们研究了动机效价(即追求奖励与避免惩罚)是否也会影响意外事件的神经和记忆编码。在功能磁共振成像(fMRI)过程中,参与者在追求奖励或避免惩罚时遇到了感知上意想不到的事件。尽管各组的动机水平相似,但奖励和惩罚在不同的内侧颞叶区域促进了对意外事件的处理。在奖励动机期间,感知上的意外增强了海马体的激活,而在惩罚动机期间,意外反而增强了海马旁皮层的激活。此外,我们发现奖励动机促进了海马体与腹内侧前额叶皮层的耦合,而惩罚动机促进了海马旁皮层与眶额皮层的耦合。在行为上,扫描后测试显示,奖励动机而非惩罚动机导致对目标追求过程中遇到的意外事件有更高的记忆选择性。这些发现共同表明,由对奖励和惩罚的预期所激活的神经调节系统针对内侧颞叶的不同组成部分,调节内侧颞叶的敏感性和连通性。因此,奖励和惩罚动机产生了不同的学习神经背景,对意外事件如何被纳入环境的预测记忆模型有不同的影响。