Avoiding Punishment Is Its Own Reward
July 5, 2006
To give your child an incentive to take out the garbage, you might offer to buy
her a treat, or you might threaten to withhold her regular allowance. Does the
child respond the same way to reward as it does to avoiding punishment?
Psychologists have evidence from certain kinds of behavioral experiments to
believe that avoiding punishment is itself a reward. In a new study published
online in the open-access journal PLoS Biology , Hackjin Kim, Shinsuke Shimojo,
and John TMDoherty investigated this question by scanning the brains of humans
performing a simple instrumental conditioning task. A brain area called the
medial orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) has been linked to reward-related stimuli,
particularly when the reward involves money. The researchers found that the OFC
is also activated for avoidance learning, supporting the hypothesis that these
cognitive processes share neural mechanisms.
Sixteen people participated in the study, during which they could either lose or
win one dollar in an instrumental choice task. During the experimental trials,
participants selected one of two fractal images presented on a screen. After a
fractal was chosen, it became brighter, and four seconds later the participant
got one of four types of feedback: reward (a picture of a dollar bill and the
message, You win!), negative outcome (same image, with the text, You lost!),
neutral (a scrambled bill with the text, No change), or nothing (a blank
screen). During reward trials, the choice led to a high or low probability of
reward (earning a dollar); during avoidance trials, the choice led to a high or
low probability of avoiding a negative outcome (losing a dollar).
Over time, participants learned to choose fractals associated with a greater
probability of reward and a lower probability of a negative outcome. And, as
predicted, the medial OFC showed a higher response when participants chose an
option that resulted in not losing the dollar or in winning it. Conversely, when
participantsTM choices resulted in negative outcomes and when there was no
reward offered OFC activity declined. Compared to neutral trials, reward and
avoidance events produced significantly greater brain activity, while negative
outcomes and neutral events linked to no chance of reward resulted in
significantly decreased activity. Kim et al. argue that these functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) results provide direct evidence that avoiding
bad outcomes and receiving a reward provoke a similar response in the medial OFC.
Avoiding negative outcomes and receiving rewards amount to the same thing for
the brain: achieving a goal. Reward serves as an external signal that reinforces
behavior associated with a positive outcome, Kim et al. explain, and punishment
amounts to an intrinsic reward signal that reinforces actions linked to avoiding
bad outcomes. With fMRI evidence connecting avoidance and reward circuits,
researchers can now determine which neuron populations within the OFC contribute
to the avoidance "reward response"and perhaps shed light on the
neurobiological roots of pathological risk-seeking behavior.
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Citation: Kim H, Shimojo S, TMDoherty JP (2006) Is avoiding an aversive outcome
rewarding? Neural substrates of avoidance learning in the human brain. PLoS Biol
4(8): e233. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0040233.
CONTACT:
John O'Doherty
California Institute of Technology
1200 E California Blvd
Pasadena, CA 91106
jdoherty@hss.caltech.edu
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