Reward positivity affects temporal interval production in a continuous timing task

Author:

Yan Yan12ORCID,Hunt Laurence T.13ORCID,Hassall Cameron D.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry University of Oxford Oxford UK

2. Department of Psychology Stanford University Stanford California USA

3. Department of Experimental Psychology University of Oxford Oxford UK

4. Department of Psychology MacEwan University Edmonton Alberta Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe neural circuits of reward processing and interval timing (including the perception and production of temporal intervals) are functionally intertwined, suggesting that it might be possible for momentary reward processing to influence subsequent timing behavior. Previous animal and human studies have mainly focused on the effect of reward on interval perception, whereas its impact on interval production is less clear. In this study, we examined whether feedback, as an example of performance‐contingent reward, biases interval production. We recorded EEG from 20 participants while they engaged in a continuous drumming task with different realistic tempos (1728 trials per participant). Participants received color‐coded feedback after each beat about whether they were correct (on time) or incorrect (early or late). Regression‐based EEG analysis was used to unmix the rapid occurrence of a feedback response called the reward positivity (RewP), which is traditionally observed in more slow‐paced tasks. Using linear mixed modeling, we found that RewP amplitude predicted timing behavior for the upcoming beat. This performance‐biasing effect of the RewP was interpreted as reflecting the impact of fluctuations in reward‐related anterior cingulate cortex activity on timing, and the necessity of continuous paradigms to make such observations was highlighted.

Funder

Rhodes Scholarships

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Royal Society

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Wiley

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