Reward activates stimulus-specific and task-dependent representations in visual association cortices

Humans reliably learn which actions lead to rewards. One prominent question is how credit is assigned to environmental stimuli that are acted upon. Recent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have provided evidence that representations of rewarded stimuli are activated upon reward de...

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Main Authors: Schiffer, A, Muller, T, Yeung, N, Waszak, F
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Society for Neuroscience 2014
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author Schiffer, A
Muller, T
Yeung, N
Waszak, F
author_facet Schiffer, A
Muller, T
Yeung, N
Waszak, F
author_sort Schiffer, A
collection OXFORD
description Humans reliably learn which actions lead to rewards. One prominent question is how credit is assigned to environmental stimuli that are acted upon. Recent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have provided evidence that representations of rewarded stimuli are activated upon reward delivery, providing possible eligibility traces for credit assignment. Our study sought evidence of postreward activation in sensory cortices satisfying two conditions of instrumental learning: postreward activity should reflect the stimulus category that preceded reward (stimulus specificity), and should occur only if the stimulus was acted on to obtain reward (task dependency). Our experiment implemented two tasks in the fMRI scanner. The first was a perceptual decision-making task on degraded face and house stimuli. Stimulus specificity was evident as rewards activated the sensory cortices associated with face versus house perception more strongly after face versus house decisions, respectively, particularly in the fusiform face area. Stimulus specificity was further evident in a psychophysiological interaction analysis wherein face-sensitive areas correlated with nucleus accumbens activity after face-decision rewards, whereas house-sensitive areas correlated with nucleus accumbens activity after house-decision rewards. The second task required participants to make an instructed response. The criterion of task dependency was fulfilled as rewards after face versus house responses activated the respective association cortices to a larger degree when faces and houses were relevant to the performed task. Our study is the first to show that postreward sensory cortex activity meets these two key criteria of credit assignment, and does so independently from bottom-up perceptual processing.
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spelling oxford-uuid:eaacdc49-f26e-4c74-9c6c-b1edcdc60ae82022-03-27T11:03:58ZReward activates stimulus-specific and task-dependent representations in visual association corticesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:eaacdc49-f26e-4c74-9c6c-b1edcdc60ae8EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordSociety for Neuroscience2014Schiffer, AMuller, TYeung, NWaszak, FHumans reliably learn which actions lead to rewards. One prominent question is how credit is assigned to environmental stimuli that are acted upon. Recent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have provided evidence that representations of rewarded stimuli are activated upon reward delivery, providing possible eligibility traces for credit assignment. Our study sought evidence of postreward activation in sensory cortices satisfying two conditions of instrumental learning: postreward activity should reflect the stimulus category that preceded reward (stimulus specificity), and should occur only if the stimulus was acted on to obtain reward (task dependency). Our experiment implemented two tasks in the fMRI scanner. The first was a perceptual decision-making task on degraded face and house stimuli. Stimulus specificity was evident as rewards activated the sensory cortices associated with face versus house perception more strongly after face versus house decisions, respectively, particularly in the fusiform face area. Stimulus specificity was further evident in a psychophysiological interaction analysis wherein face-sensitive areas correlated with nucleus accumbens activity after face-decision rewards, whereas house-sensitive areas correlated with nucleus accumbens activity after house-decision rewards. The second task required participants to make an instructed response. The criterion of task dependency was fulfilled as rewards after face versus house responses activated the respective association cortices to a larger degree when faces and houses were relevant to the performed task. Our study is the first to show that postreward sensory cortex activity meets these two key criteria of credit assignment, and does so independently from bottom-up perceptual processing.
spellingShingle Schiffer, A
Muller, T
Yeung, N
Waszak, F
Reward activates stimulus-specific and task-dependent representations in visual association cortices
title Reward activates stimulus-specific and task-dependent representations in visual association cortices
title_full Reward activates stimulus-specific and task-dependent representations in visual association cortices
title_fullStr Reward activates stimulus-specific and task-dependent representations in visual association cortices
title_full_unstemmed Reward activates stimulus-specific and task-dependent representations in visual association cortices
title_short Reward activates stimulus-specific and task-dependent representations in visual association cortices
title_sort reward activates stimulus specific and task dependent representations in visual association cortices
work_keys_str_mv AT schiffera rewardactivatesstimulusspecificandtaskdependentrepresentationsinvisualassociationcortices
AT mullert rewardactivatesstimulusspecificandtaskdependentrepresentationsinvisualassociationcortices
AT yeungn rewardactivatesstimulusspecificandtaskdependentrepresentationsinvisualassociationcortices
AT waszakf rewardactivatesstimulusspecificandtaskdependentrepresentationsinvisualassociationcortices