Power of feedback-induced beta oscillations reflect omission of rewards: Evidence from an eeg gambling study

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Abstract

The functional role of high beta oscillations (20–35 Hz) during feedback processing has been suggested to reflect unexpected gains. Using a novel gambling task that separates gains and losses across blocks and directly compares reception of monetary rewards to a ‘no-reward/punishment’ condition with equal probability we aimed to further investigate the role of beta oscillations. When contrasting different feedback conditions across rewards, we found that a late low beta component (12–20 Hz) had increased in power during the omission of rewards relative to the reception of rewards, while no differences were observed during the loss domain. These findings may indicate that late low beta oscillations in the context of feedback processing may respond to omission of gains relative to other potential outcomes. We speculate that late low beta oscillations may operate as a learning mechanism that signals the brain to make future adequate decisions. Overall, our study provides new insights for the role of late low beta oscillations in reward processing.

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Yaple, Z., Martinez-Saito, M., Novikov, N., Altukhov, D., Shestakova, A., & Klucharev, V. (2018). Power of feedback-induced beta oscillations reflect omission of rewards: Evidence from an eeg gambling study. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2018.00776

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