4.5 Article

Sign-tracking modulates reward-related neural activation to reward cues, but not reward feedback

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 56, Issue 7, Pages 5000-5013

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.15787

Keywords

fMRI; incentive salience; reward cues; selective attention; VMAC

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Liverpool Technology Directorate (fMRI at LiMRIC) Shared Research Facility

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Research shows cognitive and neurobiological overlap between sign-tracking and maladaptive behavior. The study investigates the neural correlates of sign-tracking by using an additional singleton task and fMRI. The results suggest that sign-tracking is associated with activation of the 'attention and salience network' in response to reward cues but not reward feedback, demonstrating a distinction between the two in the brain.
Research shows cognitive and neurobiological overlap between sign-tracking [value-modulated attentional capture (VMAC) by response-irrelevant, discrete cues] and maladaptive behaviour (e.g. substance abuse). We investigated the neural correlates of sign-tracking in 20 adults using an additional singleton task (AST) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Participants responded to a target to win monetary reward, the amount of which was signalled by singleton type (reward cue: high value vs. low value). Singleton responses resulted in monetary deductions. Sign-tracking-greater distraction by high-value vs. low-value singletons (H > L)-was observed, with high-value singletons producing slower responses to the target than low-value singletons. Controlling for age and sex, analyses revealed no differential brain activity across H > L singletons. Including sign-tracking as a regressor of interest revealed increased activity (H > L singletons) in cortico-subcortical loops, regions associated with Pavlovian conditioning, reward processing, attention shifts and relative value coding. Further analyses investigated responses to reward feedback (H > L). Controlling for age and sex, increased activity (H > L reward feedback) was found in regions associated with reward anticipation, attentional control, success monitoring and emotion regulation. Including sign-tracking as a regressor of interest revealed increased activity in the temporal pole, a region related to value discrimination. Results suggest sign-tracking is associated with activation of the 'attention and salience network' in response to reward cues but not reward feedback, suggesting parcellation between the two at the level of the brain. Results add to the literature showing considerable overlap in neural systems implicated in reward processing, learning, habit formation, emotion regulation and substance craving.

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