Common and distinct brain activity associated with risky and ambiguous decision-making.

Published
February 23, 2020
Journal
Drug and alcohol dependence
PICOID
d6e55180
DOI
Citations
33
Keywords
Activation Likelihood Estimation (ALE), Addiction, Ambiguous, Decision-making, Functional decoding, Meta-analysis, Neuroimaging, Neuropsychiatry, Risky, Substance abuse
Copyright
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Patients/Population/Participants

risky-DM, ambiguous-DM, perceptual-DM, substance users, non-users

Intervention

risky-DM, ambiguous-DM, perceptual-DM

Comparison

risky-DM vs. perceptual-DM, ambiguous-DM vs. perceptual-DM, substance users vs. non-users

Outcome

convergent activity in the striatum and ACC, convergent activity in the lateral prefrontal cortex and insula, reduced convergent activity in the striatum, cingulate, and thalamus among users

Abstract

P
I
C
O

Two often-studied forms of uncertain decision-making (DM) are risky-DM (outcome probabilities known) and ambiguous-DM (outcome probabilities unknown). While DM in general is associated with activation of several brain regions, previous neuroimaging efforts suggest a dissociation between activity linked with risky and ambiguous choices. However, the common and distinct neurobiological correlates associated with risky- and ambiguous-DM, as well as their specificity when compared to perceptual-DM (as a 'control condition'), remains to be clarified. We conducted multiple meta-analyses on neuroimaging results from 151 studies to characterize common and domain-specific brain activity during risky-, ambiguous-, and perceptual-DM. When considering all DM tasks, convergent activity was observed in brain regions considered to be consituents of the canonical salience, valuation, and executive control networks. When considering subgroups of studies, risky-DM (vs. perceptual-DM) was linked with convergent activity in the striatum and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), regions associated with reward-related processes (determined by objective functional decoding). When considering ambiguous-DM (vs. perceptual-DM), activity convergence was observed in the lateral prefrontal cortex and insula, regions implicated in affectively-neutral mental processes (e.g., cognitive control and behavioral responding; determined by functional decoding). An exploratory meta-analysis comparing brain activity between substance users and non-users during risky-DM identified reduced convergent activity among users in the striatum, cingulate, and thalamus. Taken together, these findings suggest a dissociation of brain regions linked with risky- and ambiguous-DM reflecting possible differential functionality and highlight brain alterations potentially contributing to poor decision-making in the context of substance use disorders.

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