奖励前景对纹状体招募的发育差异是注意力需求的函数。

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-06-24 DOI:10.1016/j.dcn.2024.101412
Chelsea Sawyers, Lisa K. Straub, Joseph Gauntlett, James M. Bjork
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引用次数: 0

摘要

青少年的冒险行为被归因于发育较早的动机神经回路,而未成熟的执行控制神经回路对其控制不力。功能磁共振成像(Functional magnetic resonance imaging)发现,与成人相比,青少年的腹侧纹状体(VS)受奖赏前景的刺激增加,这支持了这一理论。其他研究则发现,与成人相比,奖励预测线索对青少年腹侧纹状体的刺激减弱。任务特征可能是造成这种差异的原因,但从未有人对此进行过系统的研究。青少年和成人共同完成了一项新颖的奖励任务,该任务保持所有奖励的预期值不变,但会改变奖励是否依赖于警觉密集型反应与在放松的反应窗口中做出幸运选择。我们研究了各组对预期线索激活纹状体 VS 和更多运动区的对比差异。两种任务条件下的奖励预期都激活了两组的部分纹状体。在体素比较中,成人在宽松时间窗内进行选择的试验中显示出更大的VS预期招募,而不是像假设的那样在更需要警觉的试验中显示出更大的VS预期招募。然而,与我们的假设相符的是,在需要警觉的条件下,成人在奖励预期过程中表现出更大的背侧纹状体和普塔门的激活。在试验结果通知后,青少年在奖励通知时显示出更大的VS激活,而在损失通知时则显示出较低的激活。这些数据扩展了横断面年龄组纹状体激励-预期招募差异的研究结果,表明在成人中,注意力和运动需求对纹状体运动效应区的招募相对较多。
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Developmental differences in striatal recruitment by reward prospects as a function of attentional demand

Adolescent risk-taking has been attributed to earlier-developing motivational neurocircuitry that is poorly controlled by immature executive-control neurocircuitry. Functional magnetic resonance imaging findings of increased ventral striatum (VS) recruitment by reward prospects in adolescents compared to adults support this theory. Other studies found blunted VS recruitment by reward-predictive cues in adolescents compared to adults. Task features may explain this discrepancy but have never been systematically explored. Adolescents and adults performed a novel reward task that holds constant the expected value of all rewards but varies whether rewards are dependent on vigilance-intensive responding versus making a lucky choice during a relaxed response window. We examined group by sub-task contrast differences in activation of VS and more motoric regions of striatum in response to anticipatory cues. Reward anticipation in both task conditions activated portions of striatum in both groups. In voxel-wise comparison, adults showed greater anticipatory recruitment of VS in trials involving choice during a relaxed time window, not in the more vigilance-demanding trials as hypothesized. In accord with our hypotheses, however, adults showed greater activation in dorsal striatum and putamen volumes of interest during reward anticipation under vigilance-demanding conditions. Following trial outcome notifications, adolescents showed greater activation of the VS during reward notification but lower activation during loss notification. These data extend findings of cross-sectional age-group differences in incentive-anticipatory recruitment of striatum, by demonstrating in adults relatively greater recruitment of motor effector regions of striatum by attentional and motor demands.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
10.60%
发文量
124
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal publishes theoretical and research papers on cognitive brain development, from infancy through childhood and adolescence and into adulthood. It covers neurocognitive development and neurocognitive processing in both typical and atypical development, including social and affective aspects. Appropriate methodologies for the journal include, but are not limited to, functional neuroimaging (fMRI and MEG), electrophysiology (EEG and ERP), NIRS and transcranial magnetic stimulation, as well as other basic neuroscience approaches using cellular and animal models that directly address cognitive brain development, patient studies, case studies, post-mortem studies and pharmacological studies.
期刊最新文献
Establishing a model of peer support for pregnant persons with a substance use disorder as an innovative approach for engaging participants in the healthy brain and child development study. Co-developing sleep-wake and sensory foundations for cognition in the human fetus and newborn. State-dependent inter-network functional connectivity development in neonatal brain from the developing human connectome project. How will developmental neuroimaging contribute to the prediction of neurodevelopmental or psychiatric disorders? Challenges and opportunities. Harmonizing multisite neonatal diffusion-weighted brain MRI data for developmental neuroscience.
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