Grupo de Investigacion 'Psiquiatria, Neurociencia y Comunidad', Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Tecnológica de Pereira, Pereira, Colombia.
Grupo de investigación en neurociencias (NeURos), Universidad del Rosario, Bogotá, Colombia.
BMC Psychol. 2019 Aug 23;7(1):55. doi: 10.1186/s40359-019-0332-x.
Inhibitory control, a key modulatory component of cognition guiding strategy and behaviour, can be affected by diverse contingencies. We explore here the effect of expectation of reward over behavioural adjustment in a Stop Signal Task modulated by reward. We hypothesize that cognitive control is modulated by different expectation of the reward.
Participants were allocated to two groups differing in their degree of knowledge in what to expect from rewards. Expected Specific Reward participants (N = 21) were informed of the different monetary feedbacks they would receive after each successful inhibition. Unexpected Reward participants (N = 24) were only told that they would receive monetary reward after correct inhibitory trials, but not the amounts or differences.
Our results confirmed previous observations demonstrating a "kick-start effect" where a high reward feedback at the beginning of the task increases response inhibition. The Expected Specific Reward condition seems also to improve inhibitory control -as measured by the stop signal reaction time (SSRT)-, compared to the Unexpected Reward group.
Knowledge of reward magnitudes seems to play a role in cognitive control irrespective of feedback magnitude. The manipulation of reward expectation appears to trigger different strategies for cognitive control, inducing a bottom-up effect of external cues, or a top-down effect given by the anticipation of incoming rewards. This is an early exploration to unearth possible higher order modulators - expectation and motivation- of cognitive control. This approach aims to gain insight into diverse psychopathological conditions related to impulsivity and altered reward systems such as Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD), personality disorders, substance abuse, pathological gambling and cognitive aspects of Parkinson Disease.
抑制控制是一种指导策略和行为的认知调节成分,可受到多种条件的影响。我们在这里探讨了在奖励调节的停止信号任务中,对奖励的期望对行为调整的影响。我们假设认知控制受到不同奖励期望的调节。
参与者被分配到两个组,他们对奖励的期望程度不同。预期特定奖励组(N=21)被告知他们在每次成功抑制后将获得不同的货币反馈。意外奖励组(N=24)只被告知他们在正确的抑制试验后会获得货币奖励,但不知道奖励的金额或差异。
我们的结果证实了先前的观察结果,即在任务开始时给予高奖励反馈会增加反应抑制,即“启动效应”。与意外奖励组相比,预期特定奖励条件似乎也能改善抑制控制——以停止信号反应时间(SSRT)衡量。
对奖励幅度的了解似乎在不考虑反馈幅度的情况下对认知控制起作用。对奖励期望的操纵似乎会引发不同的认知控制策略,引发外部线索的自下而上效应,或由预期的传入奖励引起的自上而下效应。这是对认知控制的可能更高阶调节因素(期望和动机)的早期探索。这种方法旨在深入了解与冲动和改变的奖励系统相关的各种精神病理状况,如注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)、人格障碍、药物滥用、病理性赌博和帕金森病的认知方面。