Pornpattananangkul Narun, Nadig Ajay, Heidinger Storm, Walden Keegan, Nusslock Robin
Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA.
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore.
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2017 Jun;17(3):625-641. doi: 10.3758/s13415-017-0501-4.
Although waiting for a reward reduces or discounts its value, some people have a stronger tendency to wait for larger rewards and forgo smaller-but-immediate rewards. This ability to delay gratification is captured by individual differences in so-called intertemporal choices in which individuals are asked to choose between larger-but-delayed versus smaller-but-immediate rewards. The current study used event-related potentials (ERPs) to examine whether enhancement in two neurocognitive processes, outcome anticipation and outcome evaluation, modulate individual variability in intertemporal responses. After completing a behavioral intertemporal choice task, 34 participants performed an ERP gambling task. From this ERP task, we separately examined individual differences in outcome anticipation (stimulus-preceding negativity; SPN), early outcome valuation (feedback-related negativity; FRN), and late outcome evaluation (P3). We observed that both elevated outcome-anticipation (SPN) and late outcome-evaluation (P3) neural processes predicted a stronger preference toward larger-but-delayed rewards. No relationship was observed between intertemporal responses and early outcome evaluation (FRN), indicating that the relationship between outcome evaluation and intertemporal responses was specific to the late outcome-evaluation processing stream. Moreover, multiple regression analyses indicated that the SPN and P3 independently modulate individual differences in intertemporal responses, suggesting separate mechanisms underlie the relationship between these two neurocognitive processes and intertemporal responses. Accordingly, we identify two potential neurocognitive modulators of individual variability in intertemporal responses. We discuss the mechanisms underlying these modulators in terms of anticipation-related processing (SPN) and a saliency bias toward gain (compared to loss) outcomes (P3).
尽管等待奖励会降低其价值或使其打折扣,但有些人更倾向于等待更大的奖励,而放弃较小但即时的奖励。这种延迟满足的能力体现在所谓的跨期选择中的个体差异上,在跨期选择中,要求个体在更大但延迟的奖励与较小但即时的奖励之间做出选择。当前的研究使用事件相关电位(ERP)来检验在结果预期和结果评估这两种神经认知过程中的增强是否会调节跨期反应中的个体差异。在完成一项行为跨期选择任务后,34名参与者进行了一项ERP赌博任务。从这项ERP任务中,我们分别考察了结果预期(刺激前负波;SPN)、早期结果评估(反馈相关负波;FRN)和晚期结果评估(P3)方面的个体差异。我们观察到,增强的结果预期(SPN)和晚期结果评估(P3)神经过程都预示着对更大但延迟的奖励有更强的偏好。在跨期反应和早期结果评估(FRN)之间未观察到相关性,这表明结果评估与跨期反应之间的关系特定于晚期结果评估处理流。此外,多元回归分析表明,SPN和P3独立调节跨期反应中的个体差异,这表明这两种神经认知过程与跨期反应之间的关系有不同的机制。因此,我们确定了跨期反应中个体差异的两种潜在神经认知调节因素。我们从预期相关处理(SPN)和对收益(与损失相比)结果的显著性偏差(P3)方面讨论了这些调节因素背后的机制。