Frontal network dynamics reflect neurocomputational mechanisms for reducing maladaptive biases in motivated action.
Motivation exerts control over behavior by eliciting Pavlovian responses, which can either match or conflict with instrumental action. We can overcome maladaptive motivational influences putatively through frontal cognitive control. However, the neurocomputational mechanisms subserving this control...
المؤلفون الرئيسيون: | Jennifer C Swart, Michael J Frank, Jessica I Määttä, Ole Jensen, Roshan Cools, Hanneke E M den Ouden |
---|---|
التنسيق: | مقال |
اللغة: | English |
منشور في: |
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
2018-10-01
|
سلاسل: | PLoS Biology |
الوصول للمادة أونلاين: | http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6207318?pdf=render |
مواد مشابهة
-
Prefrontal signals precede striatal signals for biased credit assignment in motivational learning biases
حسب: Johannes Algermissen, وآخرون
منشور في: (2024-01-01) -
Prefrontal signals precede striatal signals for biased credit assignment in motivational learning biases
حسب: Algermissen, J, وآخرون
منشور في: (2024) -
Catecholaminergic challenge uncovers distinct Pavlovian and instrumental mechanisms of motivated (in)action
حسب: Jennifer C Swart, وآخرون
منشور في: (2017-05-01) -
Striatal bold and midfrontal theta power express motivation for action
حسب: Algermissen, J, وآخرون
منشور في: (2021) -
Pupil dilation reflects effortful action invigoration in overcoming aversive Pavlovian biases
حسب: Algermissen, J, وآخرون
منشور في: (2024)