The computational and neural substrates of individual differences in impulsivity under loss framework

Author:

Jiang Keying1,Zhao Guang1,Feng Qian2,Guan Shunping1,Im Hohjin3,Zhang Bin1,Wang Pinchun1,Jia Xuji1,Zhu Haidong4,Zhu Ye1,Wang He5,Wang Qiang167ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Psychology Tianjin Normal University Tianjin China

2. Epilepsy Center, Tsinghua University Hospital of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine Beijing China

3. Independent Researcher USA

4. Normal College Shihezi University Shihezi China

5. Institute of Biomedical Engineering Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College Tianjin China

6. Key Laboratory of Philosophy and Social Science of Anhui Province on Adolescent Mental Health and Crisis Intelligence Intervention Hefei China

7. Institute of Mathematics and Interdisciplinary Sciences Tianjin Normal University Tianjin China

Abstract

AbstractNumerous neuroimaging studies have identified significant individual variability in intertemporal choice, often attributed to three neural mechanisms: (1) increased reward circuit activity, (2) decreased cognitive control, and (3) prospection ability. These mechanisms that explain impulsivity, however, have been primarily studied in the gain domain. This study extends this investigation to the loss domain. We employed a hierarchical Bayesian drift‐diffusion model (DDM) and the inter‐subject representational similarity approach (IS‐RSA) to investigate the potential computational neural substrates underlying impulsivity in loss domain across two experiments (n = 155). These experiments utilized a revised intertemporal task that independently manipulated the amounts of immediate and delayed‐loss options. Behavioral results demonstrated positive correlations between the drift rate, measured by the DDM, and the impulsivity index K in Exp. 1 (n = 97) and were replicated in Exp. 2 (n = 58). Imaging analyses further revealed that the drift rate significantly mediated the relations between brain properties (e.g., prefrontal cortex activations and gray matter volume in the orbitofrontal cortex and precuneus) and K in Exp. 1. IS‐RSA analyses indicated that variability in the drift rate also mediated the associations between inter‐subject variations in activation patterns and individual differences in K. These findings suggest that individuals with similar impulsivity levels are likely to exhibit similar value processing patterns, providing a potential explanation for individual differences in impulsivity within a loss framework.

Funder

Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin Municipality

Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences Initiative for Innovative Medicine

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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