4.7 Article

Neural correlates of visual attention during risky decision evidence integration

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 234, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.117979

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH/NIDA [R01DA026457, R21-DA040773]
  2. NIMH [T32MH103213, F31MH122122]
  3. Indiana CTSI Predoctoral Grant [UL1TR001108, TL1TR001107]
  4. Indiana METACyt Initiative of Indiana University
  5. Lilly Endowment, Inc.

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Value-based decision-making involves a dynamic integration process that assesses potential outcomes. The neural regions, including ACC and PI, are implicated in encoding risk and evaluating risky choices. ACC is involved in ongoing evaluation of high-value but risky options, while PI plays a general evaluative role in comparing safe and risky outcomes.
Value-based decision-making is presumed to involve a dynamic integration process that supports assessing the potential outcomes of different choice options. Decision frameworks assume the value of a decision rests on both the desirability and risk surrounding an outcome. Previous work has highlighted neural representations of risk in the human brain, and their relation to decision choice. Key neural regions including the insula and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) have been implicated in encoding the effects of risk on decision outcomes, including approach and avoidance. Yet, it remains unknown whether these regions are involved in the dynamic integration processes that precede and drive choice, and their relationship with ongoing attention. Here, we used concurrent fMRI and eye-tracking to discern neural activation related to visual attention preceding choice between sure-thing (i.e. safe) and risky gamble options. We found activation in both dorsal ACC (dACC) and posterior insula (PI) scaled in opposite directions with the difference in attention to risky rewards relative to risky losses. PI activation also differentiated foveations on both risky options (rewards and losses) relative to a sure-thing option. These findings point to ACC involvement in ongoing evaluation of risky but higher value options. The role of PI in risky outcomes points to a more general evaluative role in the decision-making that compares both safe and risky outcomes, irrespective of potential for gains or losses.

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