Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7303661 | Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2015 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Oscillatory activity has been proposed as a key mechanism in the integration of brain activity of distant structures. Particularly, high frequency brain oscillatory activity in the beta and gamma range has received increasing interest in the domains of attention and memory. In addition, a number of recent studies have revealed an increase of beta-gamma activity (20-35Â Hz) after unexpected or relevant positive reward outcomes. In the present manuscript we review the literature on this phenomenon and we propose that this activity is a brain signature elicited by unexpected positive outcomes in order to transmit a fast motivational value signal to the reward network. In addition, we hypothesize that beta-gamma oscillatory activity indexes the interaction between attentional and emotional systems, and that it directly reflects the appearance of unexpected positive rewards in learning-related contexts.
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Authors
Josep Marco-Pallarés, Thomas F. Münte, Antoni RodrÃguez-Fornells,