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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The involvement of the striatum in decision making.

TLDR
There is a need to improve the ecological value of experimental tasks that assess decision making in various contexts and with rewards to help translate laboratory learnings into real-life benefits and strengthen the degree of integration of both cognitive and neural substrates.
Abstract
Decision making has been extensively studied in the context of economics and from a group perspective, but still little is known on individual decision making. Here we discuss the different cognitive processes involved in decision making and its associated neural substrates. The putative conductors in decision making appear to be the prefrontal cortex and the striatum. Impaired decision-making skills in various clinical populations have been associated with activity in the prefrontal cortex and in the striatum. We highlight the importance of strengthening the degree of integration of both cognitive and neural substrates in order to further our understanding of decision-making skills. In terms of cognitive paradigms, there is a need to improve the ecological value of experimental tasks that assess decision making in various contexts and with rewards; this would help translate laboratory learnings into real-life benefits. In terms of neural substrates, the use of neuroimaging techniques helps characterize the neural networks associated with decision making; more recently, ways to modulate brain activity, such as in the prefrontal cortex and connected regions (eg, striatum), with noninvasive brain stimulation have also shed light on the neural and cognitive substrates of decision making. Together, these cognitive and neural approaches might be useful for patients with impaired decision-making skills. The drive behind this line of work is that decision-making abilities underlie important aspects of wellness, health, security, and financial and social choices in our daily lives.

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Recent advances in delivery of photosensitive metal-based drugs

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Subcortical dopamine and cognition in schizophrenia: looking beyond psychosis in preclinical models

TL;DR: An overview on the current state of research focused on subcortical dopamine and cognition in the context of schizophrenia research is given and future strategies and approaches aimed at improving the translational outcomes for the treatment of cognitive deficits in schizophrenia are discussed.
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Food or money? Children's brains respond differently to rewards regardless of weight status.

TL;DR: The relationship between brain reward response and body weight in children is unclear and general sensitivity to reward contributes to overeating.
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Neuronal density and proportion of interneurons in the associative, sensorimotor and limbic human striatum

TL;DR: It is demonstrated with unbiased stereology that the overall proportion of striatal interneurons is slightly lower than that reported in previous studies, and that it varies in the functional territories of this structure.
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Multimodal Magnetic Resonance Imaging Reveals Aberrant Brain Age Trajectory During Youth in Schizophrenia Patients

TL;DR: Investigating brain aging trajectories in SZ patients using multimodal MRI data revealed an aberrant brain age trajectory in young schizophrenia patients, providing new insights into the pathophysiological mechanisms of schizophrenia.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Insensitivity to future consequences following damage to human prefrontal cortex

TL;DR: Using a novel task which simulates real-life decision-making in the way it factors uncertainty of premises and outcomes, as well as reward and punishment, it is found that prefrontal patients are oblivious to the future consequences of their actions, and seem to be guided by immediate prospects only.
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An experimental analysis of ultimatum bargaining

TL;DR: In this paper, the ultimatum bargaining games with two players and two stages were investigated. But the authors focused on situations with two agents and two stage bargaining games and only one agent has to decide and the set of outcomes is restricted to two results.
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Drug Addiction and Its Underlying Neurobiological Basis: Neuroimaging Evidence for the Involvement of the Frontal Cortex

TL;DR: An integrated model of drug addiction that encompasses intoxication, bingeing, withdrawal, and craving is proposed, and results imply that addiction connotes cortically regulated cognitive and emotional processes, which result in the overvaluing of drug reinforcers, the undervalued of alternative rein forcers, and deficits in inhibitory control for drug responses.
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Dissociable roles of ventral and dorsal striatum in instrumental conditioning

TL;DR: This work scanned human participants with functional magnetic resonance imaging while they engaged in instrumental conditioning to suggest partly dissociable contributions of the ventral and dorsal striatum to the critic and the actor.
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Evaluation of a behavioral measure of risk taking: the Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART).

TL;DR: The BART evidenced sound experimental properties, and riskiness on the BART was correlated with scores on measures of sensation seeking, impulsivity, and deficiencies in behavioral constraint, indicating that the BART may be a useful tool in the assessment of risk taking.
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