compound stimuli
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Bennett ◽  
Angela Radulescu ◽  
Samuel Zorowitz ◽  
Valkyrie Felso ◽  
Yael Niv

Positive and negative affective states are respectively associated with optimistic and pessimistic expectations regarding future reward. One mechanism that might underlie these affect-related expectation biases is attention to positive- versus negative-valence stimulus features (e.g., attending to the positive reviews of a restaurant versus its expensive price). Here we tested the effects of experimentally induced positive and negative affect on feature-based attention in 120 participants completing a compound-generalization task with eye-tracking. We found that participants' reward expectations for novel compound stimuli were modulated by the affect induction in an affect-congruent way: positive affect increased reward expectations for compounds, whereas negative affect decreased reward expectations. Computational modelling and eye-tracking analyses each revealed that these effects were driven by affect-congruent changes in participants' allocation of attention to high- versus low-value features of compound stimuli. These results provide mechanistic insight into a process by which affect produces biases in generalized reward expectations.


2021 ◽  
pp. 139-157
Author(s):  
Michael J. Hautus ◽  
Neil A. Macmillan ◽  
C. Douglas Creelman
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
María Soledad Guerrero ◽  
Miguel Ángel Maldonado ◽  
Juan Antonio Moriana ◽  
Francisco J. Alós

2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 2215-2232
Author(s):  
Cecília Brayner de Freitas Gueiros ◽  
Paula Debert

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed L. Drame ◽  
Maria Balaet ◽  
Jonathan L. C. Lee

AbstractStudies of memory reconsolidation of pavlovian memories have typically employed unimodal conditioned stimuli, despite the use of multimodal compound stimuli in other settings. Here we studied sign-tracking behaviour to a compound audiovisual stimulus. First, we observed not unexpectedly that sign-tracking was poorer to the audiovisual compound than to unimodal visual stimuli. Then, we showed that, depending on the parameters of compound stimulus re-exposure at memory reactivation, systemic MK-801 treatment either impaired extinction to improve signtracking at test, or disrupted reconsolidation to impair test behaviour. When memory reactivation consisted of re-exposure to only the auditory component of the compound stimulus, we observed sign-tracking impairments following MK-801 treatment, but only under certain test conditions. This was in contrast to the consistent impairment following reactivation with the full audiovisual compound. Moreover, the parameters of auditory stimulus presentation to enable MK-801-induced impairment at test varied depending on whether the stimulus was presented within or outside the training context. These findings suggest that behaviour under the control of appetitive pavlovian compound stimuli can be modulated by targeting both extinction and reconsolidation, and that it is not necessary to re-expose to the full compound stimulus in order to achieve a degree of modulation of behaviour.


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