外向性和多巴胺基因的个体差异预测神经奖励反应

Michael X. Cohen , Jennifer Young , Jong-Min Baek , Christopher Kessler , Charan Ranganath
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引用次数: 264

摘要

心理学家将性格外向性与奖励敏感性和多巴胺功能的差异联系起来,但对于这些差异如何反映在大脑多巴胺能神经奖励系统的功能中,人们知之甚少。在这里,我们展示了外向性的个体差异和多巴胺D2受体基因A1等位基因的存在,预测了在赌博任务中大脑奖励系统的激活程度。在两个功能性MRI实验中,参与者可能会在行为反应后立即获得奖励(研究1)或在7.5 s的预期期后获得奖励(研究2)。尽管群体激活图揭示了奖励系统中与预期和奖励相关的激活,但外向性的个体差异和D2 Taq1A等位基因的存在预测了奖励相关的程度的显著的主体间差异。但不是与预期相关的激活。这些结果表明,性格、基因和大脑功能的稳定差异之间存在联系。
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Individual differences in extraversion and dopamine genetics predict neural reward responses

Psychologists have linked the personality trait extraversion both to differences in reward sensitivity and to dopamine functioning, but little is known about how these differences are reflected in the functioning of the brain's dopaminergic neural reward system. Here, we show that individual differences in extraversion and the presence of the A1 allele on the dopamine D2 receptor gene predict activation magnitudes in the brain's reward system during a gambling task. In two functional MRI experiments, participants probabilistically received rewards either immediately following a behavioral response (Study 1) or after a 7.5 s anticipation period (Study 2). Although group activation maps revealed anticipation- and reward-related activations in the reward system, individual differences in extraversion and the presence of the D2 Taq1A allele predicted a significant amount of inter-subject variability in the magnitudes of reward-related, but not anticipation-related, activations. These results demonstrate a link between stable differences in personality, genetics, and brain functioning.

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