| Literature DB >> 26158468 |
Brent A Field1, Cara L Buck2, Samuel M McClure3, Leigh E Nystrom1, Daniel Kahneman4, Jonathan D Cohen5.
Abstract
Studies of subjective well-being have conventionally relied upon self-report, which directs subjects' attention to their emotional experiences. This method presumes that attention itself does not influence emotional processes, which could bias sampling. We tested whether attention influences experienced utility (the moment-by-moment experience of pleasure) by using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measure the activity of brain systems thought to represent hedonic value while manipulating attentional load. Subjects received appetitive or aversive solutions orally while alternatively executing a low or high attentional load task. Brain regions associated with hedonic processing, including the ventral striatum, showed a response to both juice and quinine. This response decreased during the high-load task relative to the low-load task. Thus, attentional allocation may influence experienced utility by modulating (either directly or indirectly) the activity of brain mechanisms thought to represent hedonic value.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26158468 PMCID: PMC4497686 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0130880
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The trial components’ timing.
Each trial lasted 18 s. The n-back stimulus was presented at 250 ms and subjects were asked to respond immediately. At 6, 8, or 10 s following stimulus onset, subjects received 0.5 ml boluses of either juice or quinine solution in their mouths. On the half the trials (50 percent probability represented by grey line), a flickering checkerboard was shown for 500 ms at 6, 8 or 10 s following stimulus onset, but never when juice or quinine was delivered. The timing of the solution administration and checkerboard were determined by a permutation table (S1 Table), each of the six outcomes of which are displayed here.
Fig 2Reward processing regions had a load-related reduction of BOLD response to juice and quinine, but visual stimulation was not modulated.
Regions A-C show where there was significant load-related BOLD reduction, and corresponded to the regions listed in Table 1. Region A is in the left striatum. Region B is in the right striatum. Region C is the dorsal anterior cingulate region. Neurological convention.
Regions showing load-related reduction of BOLD responses to hedonic stimuli (juice and quinine combined).
| Talairach | CI | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Region | Volume mm3 | X | Y | Z | Prob. | Diff. in means | Low | High |
| Left Striatum | 2349 | -22.5 | 7.5 | -6.5 | 3.04E-05 | 0.00311 | 0.00203 | 0.00420 |
| Right Striatum | 1782 | 22.5 | 16.5 | -0.5 | 7.09E-07 | 0.00390 | 0.00231 | 0.00549 |
| ACC region | 1107 | 1.5 | 13.5 | 44.5 | 5.30E-06 | 0.00371 | 0.00261 | 0.00480 |
* Center of mass
† 95% confidence interval Bonferroni-corrected for number of ROIs
Fig 3Load did not affect the checkerboard BOLD response.
This shows BOLD responses to the flickering checkerboard stimulus within a predefined AFNI anatomical mask for BA 17. This region exhibited no significant n-back modulation. Estimated hemodynamic responses are statistically independently of the ROI selection (a predefined anatomical mask). Error bars show s.e.m.