Anderson Brian A, Kuwabara Hiroto, Wong Dean F, Gean Emily G, Rahmim Arman, Brašić James R, George Noble, Frolov Boris, Courtney Susan M, Yantis Steven
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA.
Section of High Resolution Brain PET, Division of Nuclear Medicine, Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 733 N. Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Curr Biol. 2016 Feb 22;26(4):550-5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.12.062. Epub 2016 Feb 11.
Reward learning gives rise to strong attentional biases. Stimuli previously associated with reward automatically capture visual attention regardless of intention. Dopamine signaling within the ventral striatum plays an important role in reward learning, representing the expected reward initiated by a cue. How dopamine and the striatum may be involved in maintaining behaviors that have been shaped by reward learning, even after reward expectancies have changed, is less well understood. Nonspecific measures of brain activity have implicated the striatum in value-based attention. However, the neurochemical mechanisms underlying the attentional priority of learned reward cues remain unexplored. Here, we investigated the contribution of dopamine to value-based attention using positron emission tomography (PET) with [(11)C]raclopride. We show that, in the explicit absence of reward, the magnitude of attentional capture by previously reward-associated but currently task-irrelevant distractors is correlated across individuals with changes in available D2/D3 dopamine receptors (presumably due to intrasynaptic dopamine) linked to distractor processing within the right caudate and posterior putamen. Our findings provide direct evidence linking dopamine signaling within the striatum to the involuntary orienting of attention, and specifically to the attention-grabbing quality of learned reward cues. These findings also shed light on the neurochemical basis of individual susceptibility to value-driven attentional capture, which is known to play a role in addiction. More broadly, the present study highlights the value and feasibility of using PET to relate changes in the release of a neurotransmitter to learning-dependent changes in healthy adults.
奖赏学习会引发强烈的注意偏向。先前与奖赏相关联的刺激会自动吸引视觉注意,而不论个体意图如何。腹侧纹状体内的多巴胺信号在奖赏学习中发挥着重要作用,它代表由线索引发的预期奖赏。然而,即使奖赏预期已经改变,多巴胺和纹状体如何参与维持由奖赏学习塑造的行为,目前还不太清楚。非特异性的大脑活动测量方法表明纹状体与基于价值的注意有关。然而,习得的奖赏线索的注意优先级背后的神经化学机制仍未得到探索。在这里,我们使用[(11)C]雷氯必利正电子发射断层扫描(PET)研究了多巴胺对基于价值的注意的贡献。我们发现,在明确没有奖赏的情况下,先前与奖赏相关但当前与任务无关的干扰物所引起的注意捕获程度,在个体间与右侧尾状核和壳核后部内与干扰物处理相关的可用D2/D3多巴胺受体的变化(可能是由于突触内多巴胺)相关。我们的研究结果提供了直接证据,将纹状体内的多巴胺信号与注意力的非自愿定向联系起来,特别是与习得的奖赏线索的吸引注意力的特性联系起来。这些发现也揭示了个体对价值驱动的注意捕获易感性的神经化学基础,已知这种易感性在成瘾中起作用。更广泛地说,本研究强调了使用PET将神经递质释放的变化与健康成年人中依赖学习的变化联系起来的价值和可行性。