4.5 Article

Hierarchical prediction errors in midbrain and septum during social learning

期刊

SOCIAL COGNITIVE AND AFFECTIVE NEUROSCIENCE
卷 12, 期 4, 页码 618-634

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsw171

关键词

hierarchical prediction errors; theory of mind; Bayesian inference; fMRI; dopamine; COMT

资金

  1. UZH Forschungskredit
  2. Rene and Susanne Braginsky Foundation
  3. University of Zurich
  4. UZH Clinical Research Priority Program (CRPP) 'Molecular Imaging'
  5. Joint Initiative involving Max Planck Society
  6. University College London on Computational Psychiatry and Aging Research

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Social learning is fundamental to human interactions, yet its computational and physiological mechanisms are not well understood. One prominent open question concerns the role of neuromodulatory transmitters. We combined fMRI, computational modelling and genetics to address this question in two separate samples (N = 35, N = 47). Participants played a game requiring inference on an adviser's intentions whose motivation to help or mislead changed over time. Our analyses suggest that hierarchically structured belief updates about current advice validity and the adviser's trustworthiness, respectively, depend on different neuromodulatory systems. Low-level prediction errors (PEs) about advice accuracy not only activated regions known to support 'theory of mind', but also the dopaminergic midbrain. Furthermore, PE responses in ventral striatum were influenced by the Met/Val polymorphism of the Catechol-O-Methyltransferase (COMT) gene. By contrast, high-level PEs ('expected uncertainty') about the adviser's fidelity activated the cholinergic septum. These findings, replicated in both samples, have important implications: They suggest that social learning rests on hierarchically related PEs encoded by midbrain and septum activity, respectively, in the same manner as other forms of learning under volatility. Furthermore, these hierarchical PEs may be broadcast by dopaminergic and cholinergic projections to induce plasticity specifically in cortical areas known to represent beliefs about others.

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