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Stress-sensitive inference of task controllability

Author

Listed:
  • Romain Ligneul

    (Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown
    Radboud University)

  • Zachary F. Mainen

    (Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown)

  • Verena Ly

    (Radboud University
    Leiden University)

  • Roshan Cools

    (Radboud University
    Radboud University Medical Centre)

Abstract

Estimating the controllability of the environment enables agents to better predict upcoming events and decide when to engage controlled action selection. How does the human brain estimate controllability? Trial-by-trial analysis of choices, decision times and neural activity in an explore-and-predict task demonstrate that humans solve this problem by comparing the predictions of an ‘actor’ model with those of a reduced ‘spectator’ model of their environment. Neural blood oxygen level-dependent responses within striatal and medial prefrontal areas tracked the instantaneous difference in the prediction errors generated by these two statistical learning models. Blood oxygen level-dependent activity in the posterior cingulate, temporoparietal and prefrontal cortices covaried with changes in estimated controllability. Exposure to inescapable stressors biased controllability estimates downward and increased reliance on the spectator model in an anxiety-dependent fashion. Taken together, these findings provide a mechanistic account of controllability inference and its distortion by stress exposure.

Suggested Citation

  • Romain Ligneul & Zachary F. Mainen & Verena Ly & Roshan Cools, 2022. "Stress-sensitive inference of task controllability," Nature Human Behaviour, Nature, vol. 6(6), pages 812-822, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nathum:v:6:y:2022:i:6:d:10.1038_s41562-022-01306-w
    DOI: 10.1038/s41562-022-01306-w
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