The Neurobiology of Personal Control During Reward Learning and Its Relationship to Mood

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Abstract

Background: The majority of reward learning neuroimaging studies have not focused on the motivational aspects of behavior, such as the inherent value placed on choice itself. The experience and affective value of personal control may have particular relevance for psychiatric disorders, including depression. Methods: We adapted a functional magnetic resonance imaging reward task that probed the value placed on exerting control over one's decisions, termed choice value, in 122 healthy participants. We examined activation associated with choice value; personally chosen versus passively received rewards; and reinforcement learning metrics, such as prediction error. Relationships were tested between measures of motivational orientation (categorized as autonomy, control, and impersonal) and subclinical depressive symptoms. Results: Anticipating personal choice activated left insula, cingulate, right inferior frontal cortex, and ventral striatum (p familywise error–corrected

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Romaniuk, L., Sandu, A. L., Waiter, G. D., McNeil, C. J., Xueyi, S., Harris, M. A., … Whalley, H. C. (2019). The Neurobiology of Personal Control During Reward Learning and Its Relationship to Mood. Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging, 4(2), 190–199. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpsc.2018.09.015

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