A Neural Correlate of Reward-Based Behavioral Learning in Caudate Nucleus: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study of a Stochastic Decision Task
Adult
Male
Behavior
Brain Mapping
Motivation
Stochastic Processes
Decision Making
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Reward
Task Performance and Analysis
Humans
Learning
Female
Caudate Nucleus
DOI:
10.1523/jneurosci.3417-03.2004
Publication Date:
2004-02-18T20:02:48Z
AUTHORS (8)
ABSTRACT
Humans can acquire appropriate behaviors that maximize rewards on a trial-and-error basis. Recent electrophysiological and imaging studies have demonstrated that neural activity in the midbrain and ventral striatum encodes the error of reward prediction. However, it is yet to be examined whether the striatum is the main locus of reward-based behavioral learning. To address this, we conducted functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of a stochastic decision task involving monetary rewards, in which subjects had to learn behaviors involving different task difficulties that were controlled by probability. We performed a correlation analysis of fMRI data by using the explanatory variables derived from subject behaviors. We found that activity in the caudate nucleus was correlated with short-term reward and, furthermore, paralleled the magnitude of a subject's behavioral change during learning. In addition, we confirmed that this parallelism between learning and activity in the caudate nucleus is robustly maintained even when we vary task difficulty by controlling the probability. These findings suggest that the caudate nucleus is one of the main loci for reward-based behavioral learning.
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