Are all behavioral reward benefits created equally? An EEG-fMRI study

被引:10
|
作者
Kostandyan, Mariam [1 ]
Park, Haeme R. P. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Bundt, Carsten [1 ]
Gonzalez-Garcia, Carlos [1 ]
Wisniewski, David [1 ]
Krebs, Ruth M. [1 ]
Boehler, C. Nico [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Ghent, Dept Expt Psychol, Henri Dunantlaan 2, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium
[2] Neurosci Res Australia, Randwick, NSW, Australia
[3] Univ New South Wales, Sch Psychol, Sydney, NSW, Australia
基金
欧洲研究理事会; 欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS; CONTINGENT NEGATIVE-VARIATION; BILATERAL STIMULUS ARRAYS; COGNITIVE CONTROL NETWORK; INDEX FOCUSED ATTENTION; BRAIN ACTIVITY; ORBITOFRONTAL CORTEX; REACTIVE CONTROL; CONFLICT; MOTIVATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.116829
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Reward consistently boosts performance in cognitive tasks. Although many different reward manipulations exist, systematic comparisons are lacking. Reward effects on cognitive control are usually studied using monetary incentive delay (MID; cue-related reward information) or stimulus-reward association (SRA; target-related reward information) tasks. While for MID tasks, evidence clearly implicates reward-triggered global increases in proactive control, it is unclear how reward effects arise in SRA tasks, and in how far such mechanisms overlap during task preparation and target processing. Here, we address these questions with simultaneous EEG-fMRI using a Stroop task with four different block types. In addition to MID and SRA blocks, we used an SRA-task modification with reward-irrelevant cues (C-SRA) and regular reward-neutral Stroop-task blocks. Behaviorally, we observed superior performance for all reward conditions compared to Neutral, and more pronounced reward effects in the SRA and C-SRA blocks, compared to MID blocks. The fMRI data showed similar reward effects in value-related areas for events that signaled reward availability (MID cues and (C-)SRA targets), and comparable reward modulations in cognitive-control regions for all targets regardless of block type. This result pattern was echoed by the EEG data, showing clear markers of valuation and cognitive control, which only differed during task preparation, whereas reward-related modulations during target processing were again comparable across block types. Yet, considering only cue-related fMRI data, C-SRA cues triggered preparatory control processes beyond reward-unrelated MID cues, without simultaneous modulations in typical reward areas, implicating enhanced task preparation that is not directly driven by a concurrent neural reward-anticipation response. © 2020
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The fear of COVID-19 contagion: an exploratory EEG-fMRI study
    Federico, Giovanni
    Ciccarelli, Giuseppina
    Noce, Giuseppe
    Cavaliere, Carlo
    Ilardi, Ciro Rosario
    Tramontano, Liberatore
    Alfano, Vincenzo
    Mele, Giulia
    Di Cecca, Angelica
    Salvatore, Marco
    Brandimonte, Maria Antonella
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2024, 14 (01)
  • [22] EEG-fMRI Study of Alpha-Stimulation Neurobiofeedback Training Course
    Kozlova, L. I.
    Shtark, M. B.
    Mel'nikov, M. E.
    Verevkin, E. G.
    Savelov, A. A.
    Petrovskii, E. D.
    BULLETIN OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2016, 161 (05) : 623 - 628
  • [23] EEG-fMRI Bayesian framework for neural activity estimation: a simulation study
    Croce, Pierpaolo
    Basti, Alessio
    Marzetti, Laura
    Zappasodi, Filippo
    Del Gratta, Cosimo
    JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING, 2016, 13 (06)
  • [24] NEURONAL NETWORKS RELATED TO THE OFFSET OF ABSENCE SEIZURES: AN EEG-FMRI STUDY
    Mirandola, L.
    Ballotta, D.
    Zucchelli, M.
    Ruggieri, A.
    Ferrari, E.
    Vaudano, A. E.
    Nichelli, P. F.
    Meletti, S.
    Benuzzi, F.
    EPILEPSIA, 2014, 55 : 153 - 153
  • [25] Electrophysiological signatures of the resting-state fMRI global signal: A simultaneous EEG-fMRI study
    Huang, Xiaoli
    Long, Zhiliang
    Lei, Xu
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE METHODS, 2019, 311 : 351 - 359
  • [26] EEG-fMRI Study of Alpha-Stimulation Neurobiofeedback Training Course
    L. I. Kozlova
    M. B. Shtark
    M. E. Mel’nikov
    E. G. Verevkin
    A. A. Savelov
    E. D. Petrovskii
    Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine, 2016, 161 : 623 - 628
  • [27] EEG-fMRI study of the interictal epileptic activity in patients with partial epilepsy
    Liu, Yonghong
    Yang, Tianhua
    Yang, Xuhong
    Liu, Ling
    Liao, Wei
    Lui, Su
    Huang, Xiaoqi
    Chen, Huafu
    Gong, Qiyong
    Zhou, Dong
    JOURNAL OF THE NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2008, 268 (1-2) : 117 - 123
  • [28] The fear of COVID-19 contagion: an exploratory EEG-fMRI study
    Giovanni Federico
    Giuseppina Ciccarelli
    Giuseppe Noce
    Carlo Cavaliere
    Ciro Rosario Ilardi
    Liberatore Tramontano
    Vincenzo Alfano
    Giulia Mele
    Angelica Di Cecca
    Marco Salvatore
    Maria Antonella Brandimonte
    Scientific Reports, 14
  • [29] Multi layer spectral decomposition technique for ERD estimation in EEG μ rhythms: An EEG-fMRI study
    Ferdowsi, Saideh
    Abolghasemi, Vahid
    NEUROCOMPUTING, 2018, 275 : 1836 - 1845
  • [30] A NOVEL METHOD FOR THE CLASSIFICATION OF INTERICTAL EEG ABNORMALITIES IN PARTIAL EPILEPSY: AN EEG-FMRI VALIDATION STUDY
    Vaudano, A. E.
    Pedreira, C.
    Thornton, R.
    Chaudhary, U.
    Vulliemoz, S.
    Laufs, H.
    Rodionov, R.
    Quiroga, R. Quian
    Lemieux, L.
    EPILEPSIA, 2012, 53 : 62 - 62