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title: Abivardi et al. (2023) | ||
subtitle: 'Acceleration of inferred neural responses to oddball targets in an individual with bilateral amygdala lesion compared to healthy controls' | ||
date: 2023/09/04 | ||
authors: | ||
- Abivardi, Aslan | ||
- Korn, Christoph W | ||
- Rojkov, Ivan | ||
- Gerster, Samuel | ||
- Hurlemann, Rene | ||
- Bach, Dominik R | ||
journal: Sci. Rep. | ||
paper_url: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-41357-1 | ||
data_url: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8239465 | ||
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Detecting unusual auditory stimuli is crucial for discovering potential threat. Locus coeruleus (LC), which coordinates attention, and amygdala, which is implicated in resource prioritization, both respond to deviant sounds. Evidence concerning their interaction, however, is sparse. Seeking to elucidate if human amygdala affects estimated LC activity during this process, we recorded pupillary responses during an auditory oddball and an illuminance change task, in a female with bilateral amygdala lesions (BG) and in n = 23 matched controls. Neural input in response to oddballs was estimated via pupil dilation, a reported proxy of LC activity, harnessing a linear-time invariant system and individual pupillary dilation response function (IRF) inferred from illuminance responses. While oddball recognition remained intact, estimated LC input for BG was compacted to an impulse rather than the prolonged waveform seen in healthy controls. This impulse had the earliest response mean and highest kurtosis in the sample. As a secondary finding, BG showed enhanced early pupillary constriction to darkness. These findings suggest that LC-amygdala communication is required to sustain LC activity in response to anomalous sounds. Our results provide further evidence for amygdala involvement in processing deviant sound targets, although it is not required for their behavioral recognition. |
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title: Arnau et al. (2023) | ||
subtitle: 'Frontal midline theta power during the cue-target-interval reflects increased cognitive effort in rewarded task-switching' | ||
date: 2023/09/25 | ||
authors: | ||
- Arnau, Stefan | ||
- Liegel, Nathalie | ||
- Wascher, Edmund | ||
journal: bioRxiv | ||
paper_url: https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.09.25.559275 | ||
data_url: https://osf.io/ndgst/ | ||
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Cognitive performance largely depends on how much effort is invested during task-execution. This also means that we rarely perform as good as we could. Cognitive effort is adjusted to the expected outcome of performance, meaning that it is driven by motivation. The results from recent studies investigating the effects manipulations of motivation clearly suggest that it is the expenditure of cognitive control that is particularly prone to being affected by modulations of cognitive effort. Although recent EEG studies investigated the neural underpinnings of the interaction of effort and control, reports on how cognitive effort is reflected by oscillatory activity of the EEG are quite sparse. It is the goal of the present study to bridge this gap by performing an exploratory analysis of high-density EEG data from a switching-task using manipulations of monetary incentives. A beamformer approach is used to localize the sensor-level effects in source-space. The results indicate that the manipulation of cognitive effort was successful. The participants reported significantly higher motivation and cognitive effort in high versus low reward trials. Performance was also significantly increased. The analysis of the EEG data revealed that the increase of cognitive effort was reflected by an increased mid-frontal theta activity during the cue-target interval, suggesting an increased use of proactive control. Alpha-desynchronization throughout the trial was also more pronounced in high reward trials, signaling a bias of attention towards the processing of external stimuli. Source reconstruction suggests that these effects are located in areas related to cognitive control, and visual processing. |
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title: Blain et al. (2023) | ||
subtitle: 'Sensitivity to intrinsic rewards is domain general and related to mental health' | ||
date: 2023/09/06 | ||
authors: | ||
- Blain, Bastien | ||
- Pinhorn, India | ||
- Sharot, Tali | ||
journal: Nat. Ment. Health | ||
paper_url: https://doi.org/10.1038/s44220-023-00116-x | ||
data_url: https://github.com/BastienBlain/SensitivityToIntrinsicRewardsIsDomainGeneralAndRelatedToMentalHealth- | ||
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Humans frequently engage in intrinsically rewarding activities (for example, consuming art, reading). Despite such activities seeming diverse, we show that sensitivity to intrinsic rewards is domain general and associated with mental health. In this cross-sectional study, participants online (N = 483) were presented with putative visual, cognitive and social intrinsic rewards as well as monetary rewards and neutral stimuli. All rewards elicited positive feelings (were ‘liked’), generated consummatory behaviour (were ‘wanted’) and increased the likelihood of the action leading to them (were ‘reinforcing’). Factor analysis revealed that ~40% of response variance across stimuli was explained by a general sensitivity to all rewards, but not to neutral stimuli. Affective aspects of mental health were associated with sensitivity to intrinsic, but not monetary, rewards. These results may help explain thriving and suffering: individuals with high reward sensitivity will engage in a variety of intrinsically rewarding activities, eventually finding those they excel at, whereas low sensitivity individuals will not. |
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