Department of Biosciences and Informatics, Keio University, Yokohama 223-0061, Japan.
Research Center for Brain Communication, Kochi University of Technology, Kami 782-8502, Japan.
J Neurosci. 2020 Dec 9;40(50):9736-9750. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1702-20.2020. Epub 2020 Nov 13.
Self-control allows humans the patience necessary to maximize reward attainment in the future. Yet it remains elusive when and how the preference to self-controlled choice is formed. We measured brain activity while female and male humans performed an intertemporal choice task in which they first received delayed real liquid rewards (forced-choice trial), and then made a choice between the reward options based on the experiences (free-choice trial). We found that, while subjects were awaiting an upcoming reward in the forced-choice trial, the anterior prefrontal cortex (aPFC) tracked a dynamic signal reflecting the pleasure of anticipating the future reward. Importantly, this prefrontal signal was specifically observed in self-controlled individuals, and moreover, interregional negative coupling between the prefrontal region and the ventral striatum (VS) became stronger in those individuals. During consumption of the liquid rewards, reduced ventral striatal activity predicted self-controlled choices in the subsequent free-choice trials. These results suggest that a well-coordinated prefrontal-striatal mechanism during the reward experience shapes preferences regarding the future self-controlled choice. Anticipating future desirable events is a critical mental function that guides self-controlled behavior in humans. When and how are the self-controlled choices formed in the brain? We monitored brain activity while humans awaited a real liquid reward that became available in tens of seconds. We found that the frontal polar cortex tracked temporally evolving signals reflecting the pleasure of anticipating the future reward, which was enhanced in self-controlled individuals. Our results highlight the contribution of the fronto-polar cortex to the formation of self-controlled preferences, and further suggest that future prospect in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) plays an important role in shaping future choice behavior.
自我控制使人类有耐心在未来最大限度地获得回报。然而,当和如何形成对自我控制选择的偏好仍然难以捉摸。我们在女性和男性人类进行跨期选择任务时测量了大脑活动,在该任务中,他们首先收到延迟的真实液体奖励(强制选择试验),然后根据经验在奖励选项之间做出选择(自由选择试验)。我们发现,当受试者在强制选择试验中等待即将到来的奖励时,前额叶皮层(aPFC)会跟踪反映对未来奖励的期待的愉悦的动态信号。重要的是,这种前额叶信号仅在自我控制个体中观察到,此外,前额叶区域和腹侧纹状体(VS)之间的区域间负耦合在这些个体中变得更强。在液体奖励的消耗期间,腹侧纹状体活动的减少预测了随后的自由选择试验中的自我控制选择。这些结果表明,在奖励体验期间,前额叶-纹状体的协调机制塑造了对未来自我控制选择的偏好。预测未来的理想事件是指导人类自我控制行为的关键心理功能。大脑中是何时以及如何形成自我控制选择的?我们监测了人类等待数十秒后可获得的真实液体奖励时的大脑活动。我们发现,额极皮层跟踪反映对未来奖励的期待的愉悦的时间演化信号,在自我控制个体中增强。我们的研究结果突出了额极皮层对自我控制偏好形成的贡献,并进一步表明,前额叶皮层(PFC)中的未来前景在塑造未来选择行为方面起着重要作用。