Independent Coding of Reward Magnitude and Valence in the Human Brain
Adult
Male
Brain Mapping
Motivation
Adolescent
Feedback, Psychological
05 social sciences
Electroencephalography
Choice Behavior
Event-Related Potentials, P300
Risk-Taking
Reward
Gambling
Humans
Female
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
DOI:
10.1523/jneurosci.4537-03.2004
Publication Date:
2004-07-14T22:35:02Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
Previous research has shown that two components of the event-related brain potential, the P300 and feedback negativity, are sensitive to information about rewards and penalties. The present study investigated the properties of these components in a simple gambling game that required participants to choose between cards that were unpredictably associated with monetary gains and losses of variable magnitude. The aim was to determine the sensitivity of each component to two critical features of reward stimuli: magnitude (small or large) and valence (win or loss). A double dissociation was observed, with the P300 sensitive to reward magnitude but insensitive to reward valence and the feedback negativity showing the opposite pattern, suggesting that these two fundamental features of rewarding stimuli are evaluated rapidly and separately in the human brain. Subsequent analyses provided additional evidence of functional dissociations between the feedback negativity and P300. First, the P300 (but not the feedback negativity) showed sensitivity to the reward value of alternative, nonselected stimuli. Second, individual differences in the amplitude of the feedback negativity correlated with individual differences in risk-taking behavior observed after monetary losses, whereas individual differences in P300 amplitude were related to behavioral adjustments observed in response to alternative, unchosen outcomes.
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