Reward Network Activations of Win versus Loss in a Monetary Gambling Task

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Abstract

Reward processing is a vital function for health and survival and is impaired in various psychiatric and neurological disorders. Using a monetary gambling task, the current study aims to elucidate neural substrates in the reward network underlying evaluation of win versus loss outcomes, and their association with behavioral characteristics, such as impulsivity and task performance, and neuropsychological functioning. Functional MRI was recorded in thirty healthy, male community volunteers (mean age = 27.4 years) while they performed a monetary gambling task in which they bet with either 10 or 50 tokens and received feedback of whether they won or lost the bet amount. Results showed that a set of key brain structures in the reward network, including putamen, caudate nucleus, superior and inferior parietal lobule, angular gyrus, and Rolandic operculum, had greater blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) signal during win relative to loss trials, and the BOLD signals in most of these regions were highly correlated with one another. Further, exploratory bivariate analyses between these reward related regions and behavioral and neuropsychological domains showed significant correlations with moderate effect sizes, including: (i) negative correlations between non-planning impulsivity and activations in putamen and caudate regions, (ii) positive correlations between risky bets and right putamen activation, (iii) negative correlations between safer bets and right putamen activation, (iv) a negative correlation between short-term memory capacity and right putamen activity, and (v) a negative correlation between poor planning skills and left inferior occipital cortex activation. These findings contribute to our understanding of the neural underpinnings of monetary reward processing and their relationships to aspects of behavior and cognitive function. Future studies may confirm these findings with larger samples of healthy controls and extend these findings by investigating various clinical groups with impaired reward processing.

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