Authors
Sara Jahfari, K Richard Ridderinkhof, Anne GE Collins, Tomas Knapen, Lourens J Waldorp, Michael J Frank
Publication date
2019/5/1
Journal
Cerebral cortex
Volume
29
Issue
5
Pages
1969-1983
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Why are we so slow in choosing the lesser of 2 evils? We considered whether such slowing relates to uncertainty about the value of these options, which arises from the tendency to avoid them during learning, and whether such slowing relates to frontosubthalamic inhibitory control mechanisms. In total, 49 participants performed a reinforcement-learning task and a stop-signal task while fMRI was recorded. A reinforcement-learning model was used to quantify learning strategies. Individual differences in lose–lose slowing related to information uncertainty due to sampling, and independently, to less efficient response inhibition in the stop-signal task. Neuroimaging analysis revealed an analogous dissociation: subthalamic nucleus (STN) BOLD activity related to variability in stopping latencies, whereas weaker frontosubthalamic connectivity related to slowing and information sampling. Across tasks, fast inhibitors …
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