The role of posterior parietal cortex in detecting changes in feedback contingency

Well-practiced or learned behaviors are extremely resilient. For example, it is extremely difficult for a trained typist to forget how to use a keyboard configuration that they are familiar with. While they can be trained on a new keyboard configuration, the original skill quickly comes back when th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain Structure and Function 2024-04, Vol.229 (3), p.775-787
1. Verfasser: Hélie, Sébastien
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Well-practiced or learned behaviors are extremely resilient. For example, it is extremely difficult for a trained typist to forget how to use a keyboard configuration that they are familiar with. While they can be trained on a new keyboard configuration, the original skill quickly comes back when the old keyboard configuration is used again. This resiliency of learned skills is both a blessing and a curse. It makes useful skills durable, but it also makes maladaptive behaviors difficult to extinguish. Crossley et al. (2013) proposed a computational model and behavioral paradigm aimed at unlearning skills using various feedback contingency manipulations during an extinction phase. They showed that partially-valid feedback during extinction removed evidence for fast reacquisition, which they interpreted as evidence for unlearning. In this article, we replicated the Crossley et al. paradigm using fMRI. Univariate analyses showed differences in BOLD signals between the different experiment phases in the frontoparietal attention network. The superior and inferior parietal lobules (SPL and IPL, respectively) showed the largest cluster differences both between experimental phases and between extinction conditions. In contrast, the prefrontal cortex only showed differences in cluster of activities between extinction conditions. Multivariate pattern analysis was also used with seeds in the SPL and IPL. The results showed that these brain areas were critical in detecting changes in experimental phases. Overall, the fMRI results found mixed evidence for the Crossley et al. model and suggest that while unlearning prevents fast reacquisition, the absence of fast reacquisition does not necessarily implies that unlearning occurred.
ISSN:1863-2661
1863-2653
1863-2661
0340-2061
DOI:10.1007/s00429-024-02765-9