| Literature DB >> 27822182 |
Chiara Volpato1, Sami Schiff2, Silvia Facchini3, Stefano Silvoni1, Marianna Cavinato1, Francesco Piccione1, Angelo Antonini3, Niels Birbaumer4.
Abstract
Dopamine systems mediate key aspects of reward learning. Parkinson's disease (PD) represents a valuable model to study reward mechanisms because both the disease process and the anti-Parkinson medications influence dopamine neurotransmission. The aim of this pilot study was to investigate whether the level of levodopa differently modulates learning from positive and negative feedback and its electrophysiological correlate, the error related negativity (ERN), in PD. Ten PD patients and ten healthy participants performed a two-stage reinforcement learning task. In the Learning Phase, they had to learn the correct stimulus within a stimulus pair on the basis of a probabilistic positive or negative feedback. Three sets of stimulus pairs were used. In the Testing Phase, the participants were tested with novel combinations of the stimuli previously experienced to evaluate whether they learned more from positive or negative feedback. PD patients performed the task both ON- and OFF-levodopa in two separate sessions while they remained on stable therapy with dopamine agonists. The electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded during the task. PD patients were less accurate in negative than positive learning both OFF- and ON-levodopa. In the OFF-levodopa state they were less accurate than controls in negative learning. PD patients had a smaller ERN amplitude OFF- than ON-levodopa only in negative learning. In the OFF-levodopa state they had a smaller ERN amplitude than controls in negative learning. We hypothesize that high tonic dopaminergic stimulation due to the dopamine agonist medication, combined to the low level of phasic dopamine due to the OFF-levodopa state, could prevent phasic "dopamine dips" indicated by the ERN needed for learning from negative feedback.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; dopamine agonists; error-related negativity; levodopa; reward learning
Year: 2016 PMID: 27822182 PMCID: PMC5075574 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2016.00205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Demographic and clinical data of sample.
| Parameters | Parkinson’s disease patients | Healthy controls |
|---|---|---|
| Gender (m/f) | 7/3 | 4/6 |
| Age (y) | 56.3 (3.24) | 57.9 (7.5) |
| Education (y) | 12.0 (4.24) | 13.1 (4.14) |
| Disease duration (y) | 8.6 (3.8) | - |
| Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale III | 26.8 (15.81) | - |
| Hoehn-Yahr Scale | 1.95 (0.15) | - |
| Levodopa equivalent dose (mg) | 792.5 (450.0) | - |
| Dopamine agonists equivalent dose (mg) | 198.1 (145.4) | - |
| Mini Mental State Examination | 29.2 (1.0) | 28.9 (1.37) |
| Beck Depression Inventory | 8.8 (4.8) | 9.7 (4.23) |
Table represents mean (standard deviation) of clinical and demographic data of Parkinson’s disease patients and healthy controls.
Figure 1The plot shows the percentage (%) of correct responses in the Testing Phase. Negative Learning = percentage of avoidance of B responses; Positive Learning = percentage of choice of A responses. PD, Parkinson’s disease. *Indicates significant difference (p < 0.05).
Figure 2Grand-average of response-locked event-related potentials (ERPs) to error and correct trials in (A) controls, (B) PD patients ON-levodopa and (C) PD patients OFF-levodopa at Cz. PD, Parkinson’s disease.