نتایج جستجو برای: reward

تعداد نتایج: 29303  

2016
Sara Garofalo Giuseppe di Pellegrino

Multiple types of reward, such as money, food or social approval, are capable of driving behavior. However, most previous investigations have only focused on one of these reward classes in isolation, as such it is not clear whether different reward classes have a unique influence on instrumental responding or whether the subjective value of the reward, rather than the reward type per se, is mos...

Journal: :Vision Research 2015
Berno Bucker Jeroen D. Silvis Mieke Donk Jan Theeuwes

The present work explored the effects of reward in the well-known global effect paradigm in which two objects appear simultaneously in close spatial proximity. The experiment consisted of three phases (i) a pre-training phase that served as a baseline, (ii) a reward-training phase to associate differently colored stimuli with high, low and no reward value, and (iii) a post-training phase in whi...

2011
Nozomu Matsuyama Teruko Uwano Etsuro Hori Taketoshi Ono Hisao Nishijo

It has been suggested that septal nuclei are important in the control of behavior during various reward and non-reward situations. In the present study, neuronal activity was recorded from rat septal nuclei during discrimination of conditioned sensory stimuli (CSs) of the medial forebrain bundle associated with or without a reward (sucrose solution or intracranial self-stimulation, ICSS). Rats ...

Journal: :Behavioral neuroscience 2013
Kimberly Kirkpatrick Andrew T Marshall Jacob Clarke Mary E Cain

Previous research has indicated that rearing in an enriched environment may promote self-control in an impulsive choice task. To further assess the effects of rearing environment on impulsivity, 2 experiments examined locomotor activity, impulsive action, impulsive choice, and different aspects of reward sensitivity and discrimination. In Experiment 1, rats reared in isolated or enriched condit...

Journal: :Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience 2012
Johanna M. Jarcho Brenda E. Benson Rista C. Plate Amanda E. Guyer Allison M. Detloff Daniel S. Pine Ellen Leibenluft Monique Ernst

Studies comparing neural correlates of reward processing across development yield inconsistent findings. This challenges theories characterizing adolescents as globally hypo- or hypersensitive to rewards. Developmental differences in reward sensitivity may fluctuate based on reward magnitude, and on whether rewards require decision-making. We examined whether these factors modulate developmenta...

Journal: :NeuroImage 2016
Stefan Pollmann Jana Estocinová Susanne Sommer Leonardo Chelazzi Wolf Zinke

Spatial contextual cueing reflects an incidental form of learning that occurs when spatial distractor configurations are repeated in visual search displays. Recently, it was reported that the efficiency of contextual cueing can be modulated by reward. We replicated this behavioral finding and investigated its neural basis with fMRI. Reward value was associated with repeated displays in a learni...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
Raymundo Báez-Mendoza Christopher J Harris Wolfram Schultz

Social interactions provide agents with the opportunity to earn higher benefits than when acting alone and contribute to evolutionary stable strategies. A basic requirement for engaging in beneficial social interactions is to recognize the actor whose movement results in reward. Despite the recent interest in the neural basis of social interactions, the neurophysiological mechanisms identifying...

Journal: :Frontiers in psychology 2016
Youlong Zhan Jie Chen Xiao Xiao Jin Li Zilu Yang Wei Fan Yiping Zhong

The present study adopted a reward-priming paradigm to investigate whether and how monetary reward cues affected self-face processing. Event-related potentials were recorded during judgments of head orientation of target faces (self, friend, and stranger), with performance associated with a monetary reward. The results showed self-faces elicited larger N2 mean amplitudes than other-faces, and m...

Journal: :Brain research 2011
Andreas Pedroni Susan Koeneke Agne Velickaite Lutz Jäncke

Physiologic studies revealed that neurons in the dopaminergic midbrain of non-human primates encode reward prediction errors. It was furthermore shown that reward prediction errors are adaptively scaled with respect to the range of possible outcomes, enabling sensitive encoding for a large range of reward values. Congruently, neuroimaging studies in humans demonstrated that BOLD-responses in th...

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