Distinct neural responses to conscious versus unconscious monetary reward cues

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Access status: Embargo until 2050-01-01 , hbm22571.pdf (327.93 KB)

Publication date

2014-11

Authors

Bijleveld, ErikISNI 0000000391028342
Custers, RuudISNI 0000000391348039
van der Stigchel, StefanISNI 0000000396732697
Aarts, HenkISNI 0000000369416605
Pas, PascalORCID 0000-0002-2200-7591
Vink, MatthijsISNI 0000000391397236

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Article

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Abstract

Human reward pursuit is often assumed to involve conscious processing of reward information. However, recent research revealed that reward cues enhance cognitive performance even when perceived without awareness. Building on this discovery, the present functional MRI study tested two hypotheses using a rewarded mental-rotation task. First, we examined whether subliminal rewards engage the ventral striatum (VS), an area implicated in reward anticipation. Second, we examined differences in neural responses to supraliminal versus subliminal rewards. Results indicated that supraliminal, but not subliminal, high-value reward cues engaged brain areas involved in reward processing (VS) and task performance (supplementary motor area, motor cortex, and superior temporal gyrus). This pattern of findings is striking given that subliminal rewards improved performance to the same extent as supraliminal rewards. So, the neural substrates of conscious versus unconscious reward pursuit are vastly different-but despite their differences, conscious and unconscious reward pursuit may still produce the same behavioral outcomes. Hum Brain Mapp 35:5578-5586, 2014.

Keywords

Cognition, Consciousness, Mental rotation, Motivation, Reward, Task performance, Ventral striatum

Citation

Bijleveld, E, Custers, R, Van der Stigchel, S, Aarts, H, Pas, P & Vink, M 2014, 'Distinct neural responses to conscious versus unconscious monetary reward cues', Human Brain Mapping, vol. 35, no. 11, pp. 5578-5586. https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.22571