Neural basis of self-initiative in relation to apathy in a student sample

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Abstract

Human behaviour can be externally driven, e.g. catching a falling glass, or self-initiated and goal-directed, e.g. drinking a cup of coffee when one deems it is time for a break. Apathy refers to a reduction of self-initiated goal-directed or motivated behaviour, frequently present in neurological and psychiatric disorders. The amount of undertaken goal-directed behaviour varies considerably in clinical as well as healthy populations. In the present study, we investigated behavioural and neural correlates of self-initiated action in a student sample (N = 39) with minimal to high levels of apathy. We replicated activation of fronto-parieto-striatal regions during self-initiation. The neural correlates of self-initiated action did not explain varying levels of apathy in our sample, neither when mass-univariate analysis was used, nor when multivariate patterns of brain activation were considered. Other hypotheses, e.g. regarding a putative role of deficits in reward anticipation, effort expenditure or executive difficulties, deserve investigation in future studies.

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Kos, C., Klaasen, N. G., Marsman, J. B. C., Opmeer, E. M., Knegtering, H., Aleman, A., & Van Tol, M. J. (2017). Neural basis of self-initiative in relation to apathy in a student sample. Scientific Reports, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-03564-5

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