4.5 Article

Contributions of dopamine-related basal ganglia neurophysiology to the developmental effects of incentives on inhibitory control

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 54, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dcn.2022.101100

Keywords

Dopamine; Tissue iron; Reward; Inhibitory control; Adolescent development

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Mental Health of the National Institutes of Health [5R01MH080243]
  2. Staunton Farm Foundation

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Inhibitory control can be less reliable in adolescence, but in the presence of rewards, adolescents' performance often improves to adult levels. Dopamine plays a role in enhancing the effects of reward on adolescent cognition and inhibitory control. Basal ganglia neurophysiology supports developmental effects of rewards on cognition, particularly during adolescence.
Inhibitory control can be less reliable in adolescence, however, in the presence of rewards, adolescents' performance often improves to adult levels. Dopamine is known to play a role in signaling rewards and supporting cognition, but its role in the enhancing effects of reward on adolescent cognition and inhibitory control remains unknown. Here, we assessed the contribution of basal ganglia dopamine-related neurophysiology using longitudinal MR-based assessments of tissue iron in rewarded inhibitory control, using an antisaccade task. In line with prior work, we show that neutral performance improves with age, and incentives enhance performance in adolescents to that of adults. We find that basal ganglia tissue iron is associated with individual differences in the magnitude of this reward boost, which is strongest in those with high levels of tissue iron, predominantly in adolescence. Our results provide novel evidence that basal ganglia neurophysiology supports developmental effects of rewards on cognition, which can inform neurodevelopmental models of the role of dopamine in reward processing during adolescence.

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