4.5 Article

Memory of my victory and your defeat: Contributions of reward- and memory-related regions to the encoding of winning events in competitions with others

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA
Volume 152, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2020.107733

Keywords

fMRI; Episodic memory; Social reward; Hippocampus; Medial orbitofrontal cortex

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [JP17H05947, JP18H04193, JP20H05802, JP17J03106, JP19K14489]
  2. Kyoto University Foundation
  3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
  4. Helen Corley Petit Scholarship in Liberal Arts and Sciences
  5. University of Illinois

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The study demonstrates that social rewards play a role in enhancing memory through interactions between reward-related regions and memory-related regions. In the competition task, opponents' Angry faces as the Win outcome were rated positively and remembered more accurately, while activation in the medial orbitofrontal cortex paralleled the pattern of valence ratings, with greater activation for the Win condition.
Social interactions enhance human memories, but little is known about how the neural mechanisms underlying episodic memories are modulated by rewarding outcomes in social interactions. To investigate this, fMRI data were recorded while healthy young adults encoded unfamiliar faces in either a competition or a control task. In the competition task, participants encoded opponents' faces in the rock-paper-scissors game, where trial-by-trial outcomes of Win, Draw, and Lose for participants were shown by facial expressions of opponents (Angry, Neutral, and Happy). In the control task, participants encoded faces by assessing facial expressions. After encoding, participants recognized faces previously learned. Behavioral data showed that emotional valence for opponents' Angry faces as the Win outcome was rated positively in the competition task, whereas the rating for Angry faces was rated negatively in the control task, and that Angry faces were remembered more accurately than Neutral or Happy faces in both tasks. fMRI data showed that activation in the medial orbitofrontal cortex (mOFC) paralleled the pattern of valence ratings, with greater activation for the Win than Draw or Lose conditions of the competition task, and the Angry condition of the control task. Moreover, functional connectivity between the mOFC and hippocampus was increased in Win compared to Angry, and the mOFC-hippocampus functional connectivity predicted individual differences in subsequent memory performance only in Win of the competition task, but not in any other conditions of the two tasks. These results demonstrate that the memory enhancement by context-dependent social rewards involves interactions between reward- and memory-related regions.

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