Chikara Rupesh K, Chang Erik C, Lu Yi-Chen, Lin Dar-Shong, Lin Chin-Teng, Ko Li-Wei
Department of Biological Science and Technology, National Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu, Taiwan.
Brain Research Center, National Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu, Taiwan.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2018 Mar 1;12:27. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2018.00027. eCollection 2018.
A reward or punishment can modulate motivation and emotions, which in turn affect cognitive processing. The present simultaneous functional magnetic resonance imaging-electroencephalography study examines neural mechanisms of response inhibition under the influence of a monetary reward or punishment by implementing a modified stop-signal task in a virtual battlefield scenario. The participants were instructed to play as snipers who open fire at a terrorist target but withhold shooting in the presence of a hostage. The participants performed the task under three different feedback conditions in counterbalanced order: a reward condition where each successfully withheld response added a bonus (i.e., positive feedback) to the startup credit, a punishment condition where each failure in stopping deduced a penalty (i.e., negative feedback), and a no-feedback condition where response outcome had no consequences and served as a control setting. Behaviorally both reward and punishment conditions led to significantly down-regulated inhibitory function in terms of the critical stop-signal delay. As for the neuroimaging results, increased activities were found for the no-feedback condition in regions previously reported to be associated with response inhibition, including the right inferior frontal gyrus and the pre-supplementary motor area. Moreover, higher activation of the lingual gyrus, posterior cingulate gyrus (PCG) and inferior parietal lobule were found in the reward condition, while stronger activation of the precuneus gyrus was found in the punishment condition. The positive feedback was also associated with stronger changes of delta, theta, and alpha synchronization in the PCG than were the negative or no-feedback conditions. These findings depicted the intertwining relationship between response inhibition and motivation networks.
奖励或惩罚可以调节动机和情绪,进而影响认知加工。本同步功能磁共振成像-脑电图研究通过在虚拟战场场景中实施改良的停止信号任务,考察了金钱奖励或惩罚影响下反应抑制的神经机制。参与者被指示扮演狙击手,向恐怖分子目标开火,但在人质出现时停止射击。参与者在三种不同的反馈条件下以平衡顺序执行任务:奖励条件,即每次成功抑制反应都会给起始信用增加一笔奖金(即正反馈);惩罚条件,即每次停止失败都会扣除一笔罚款(即负反馈);无反馈条件,即反应结果没有后果,作为对照设置。行为学上,奖励和惩罚条件在关键停止信号延迟方面均导致抑制功能显著下调。至于神经影像学结果,在先前报道与反应抑制相关的区域,包括右侧额下回和前辅助运动区,无反馈条件下的活动增加。此外,奖励条件下舌回、后扣带回(PCG)和顶下小叶的激活更高,而惩罚条件下楔前叶的激活更强。与负反馈或无反馈条件相比,正反馈还与PCG中δ、θ和α同步性的更强变化相关。这些发现描绘了反应抑制与动机网络之间的交织关系。