Cognitive Control and Psychopathology Laboratory, Psychological and Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, 1 Brookings Drive, Campus Box 1125, St. Louis, MO, 63130, USA.
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2019 Jun;19(3):692-714. doi: 10.3758/s13415-019-00713-3.
Motivational incentives play an influential role in value-based decision-making and cognitive control. A compelling hypothesis in the literature suggests that the motivational value of diverse incentives are integrated in the brain into a common currency value signal that influences decision-making and behavior. To investigate whether motivational integration processes change during healthy aging, we tested older (N = 44) and younger (N = 54) adults in an innovative incentive integration task paradigm that establishes dissociable and additive effects of liquid (e.g., juice, neutral, saltwater) and monetary incentives on cognitive task performance. The results reveal that motivational incentives improve cognitive task performance in both older and younger adults, providing novel evidence demonstrating that age-related cognitive control deficits can be ameliorated with sufficient incentive motivation. Additional analyses revealed clear age-related differences in motivational integration. Younger adult task performance was modulated by both monetary and liquid incentives, whereas monetary reward effects were more gradual in older adults and more strongly impacted by trial-by-trial performance feedback. A surprising discovery was that older adults shifted attention from liquid valence toward monetary reward throughout task performance, but younger adults shifted attention from monetary reward toward integrating both monetary reward and liquid valence by the end of the task, suggesting differential strategic utilization of incentives. These data suggest that older adults may have impairments in incentive integration and employ different motivational strategies to improve cognitive task performance. The findings suggest potential candidate neural mechanisms that may serve as the locus of age-related change, providing targets for future cognitive neuroscience investigations.
动机激励在基于价值的决策和认知控制中起着重要作用。文献中有一个引人注目的假设认为,不同激励的动机价值在大脑中被整合为一个共同的货币价值信号,从而影响决策和行为。为了研究动机整合过程在健康衰老过程中是否发生变化,我们在一项创新的激励整合任务范式中测试了老年人(N=44)和年轻人(N=54),该范式建立了液体(如果汁、中性、盐水)和货币激励对认知任务表现的可分离和附加影响。结果表明,动机激励可以提高老年人和年轻人的认知任务表现,为年龄相关的认知控制缺陷可以通过足够的激励动机得到改善提供了新的证据。额外的分析显示了动机整合中明显的年龄相关差异。年轻成年人的任务表现受到货币和液体激励的调节,而老年人的货币奖励效应则更为渐进,并且受到逐次表现反馈的影响更大。一个令人惊讶的发现是,老年人在整个任务过程中会将注意力从液体的价值转移到货币奖励上,而年轻人则会在任务结束时将注意力从货币奖励转移到整合货币奖励和液体价值上,这表明他们在激励方面的策略不同。这些数据表明,老年人可能在激励整合方面存在缺陷,并采用不同的动机策略来提高认知任务表现。这些发现表明,潜在的候选神经机制可能是年龄相关变化的位置,为未来的认知神经科学研究提供了目标。