4.5 Article

Asymmetric neural tracking of gain and loss magnitude during adolescence

期刊

SOCIAL COGNITIVE AND AFFECTIVE NEUROSCIENCE
卷 13, 期 8, 页码 785-796

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsy058

关键词

adolescence; value; reward; loss; striatum; insula

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [DGE 1144152, BCS 1452530]
  2. Sackler Scholar Programme in Psychobiology
  3. FJ McGuigan Young Investigator Prize for Understanding the Human Mind

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Adolescence has been characterized as a developmental period of heightened reward seeking and attenuated aversive processing. However, it remains unclear how the neural bases of distinct outcome valuation processes shift during this stage of the lifespan. A total of 74 participants ranging in age from 13 to 20 years completed a value-modulated functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) task in which participants earn low and high magnitude monetary outcomes to test whether gain and loss magnitude tracking-the neural representation of relative value in context-change differentially over this age span. Results revealed that gain and loss magnitude tracking follow asymmetric developmental trajectories. Gain magnitude tracking is elevated in the striatum during early adolescence and then decreases with age. By contrast, loss magnitude tracking in the anterior insula follows a quadratic pattern, undergoing a temporary attenuation during mid-late adolescence. A typical comparison of gain vs loss outcomes (collapsing over magnitude effects) showed robust activity across a suite of brain regions sensitive to value based on prior work including the ventral striatum, but they exhibited no changes with age. These findings suggest that value coding subprocesses follow divergent developmental paths across adolescence, which may contribute to normative shifts in adolescent motivated behavior.

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