Literature DB >> 23407973

Segregated encoding of reward-identity and stimulus-reward associations in human orbitofrontal cortex.

Miriam Cornelia Klein-Flügge1, Helen Catharine Barron, Kay Henning Brodersen, Raymond J Dolan, Timothy Edward John Behrens.   

Abstract

A dominant focus in studies of learning and decision-making is the neural coding of scalar reward value. This emphasis ignores the fact that choices are strongly shaped by a rich representation of potential rewards. Here, using fMRI adaptation, we demonstrate that responses in the human orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) encode a representation of the specific type of food reward predicted by a visual cue. By controlling for value across rewards and by linking each reward with two distinct stimuli, we could test for representations of reward-identity that were independent of associative information. Our results show reward-identity representations in a medial-caudal region of OFC, independent of the associated predictive stimulus. This contrasts with a more rostro-lateral OFC region encoding reward-identity representations tied to the predicate stimulus. This demonstration of adaptation in OFC to reward specific representations opens an avenue for investigation of more complex decision mechanisms that are not immediately accessible in standard analyses, which focus on correlates of average activity.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23407973      PMCID: PMC3586675          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2532-12.2013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  53 in total

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Review 10.  What the orbitofrontal cortex does not do.

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