Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3072283 NeuroImage 2010 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Previous error detection research has focused on error processing functions in the anterior cingulate cortex or on putative reinforcement learning roles of midbrain dopamine pathways. We studied error detection in 14 healthy adult volunteers using a novel fMRI design in the stop signal task (SST), a task which invokes numerous errors in performance and frequent instances of post-error slowing. The imaging design accommodated variability immediately before errors (handedness of response) and immediately after (degree of post-error slowing) using distinct within-trial regressors. This approach revealed a whole-brain view of error detection in a reinforcement-learning pathway. Error detection deactivated the midbrain in the vicinity of dorsal substantia nigra where dopamine neurons originate, and the primary targets of dopamine neurons: dorsal striatum and ventral anterior cingulate. Error detection also deactivated posterior hippocampus, which is highly sensitive to long-term synaptic plasticity effects of dopamine. Errors that led to slowed responses deactivated structures in the reciprocal pathway that are known to exert control over dopamine output, and which have been shown to encode error magnitude: ventral midbrain, ventral striatum, and caudal orbitofrontal cortex. Consistent with the role of these structures in modulating dopamine output, post-error slowing also increased activities in the same structures that deactivated on error detection. These results are consistent with the view that errors deactivate structures that receive input from dopamine neurons, followed by deactivations related to requisite behavioral adjustments in structures that exert control over dopamine output.

Research highlights►fMRI of error detection in the Stop signal task by accounting for variability before (handedness of response) and after (post-error slowing) inhibition errors. ►Error detection deactivated the midbrain in the vicinity of dorsal substantia nigra, and the primary projection sites of these neurons: dorsal striatum and ventral ACC. ►Error detection also deactivated posterior hippocampus, which is highly sensitive to the effects of afferent dopamine activity. ►Post-error slowing deactivated the reciprocal pathway that modulates the error detection pathway: caudal OFC and ventral striatum.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Cognitive Neuroscience
Authors
, ,