Article
Neurosciences
S. L. Fryer, B. J. Roach, C. B. Holroyd, M. P. Paulus, K. Sargent, A. Boos, J. M. Ford, D. H. Mathalon
Summary: This study used a 3-reel slot paradigm to assess different phases of reward processing and collected EEG data from healthy adults. The results showed distinct neurophysiological signatures of reward anticipation and outcome processing in the brain.
Article
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Jiachen Lu, Weidong Li, Yujia Xie, Qian Huang, Jingjing Li
Summary: This study investigates the impact of prosociality on outcome evaluation, finding that individuals with higher prosocial traits have more negative reactions to medium and large outcome feedback. The prosociality score is significantly correlated with the amplitude of the individual's reaction.
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
(2022)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Jiachen Lu, Weidong Li, Jingjing Li, Hong Li
Summary: This study examines the impact of reward probabilities on expectation and evaluation of reward results in a face-to-face competition task. The research reveals that when the result is uncertain, the desire for gaining rewards increases.
CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY
(2023)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Shinan Sun, Sheng Yuan, Xiaohua Bao, Huina Zhong, Ying Liu, Xuejun Bai
Summary: In our daily lives, we engage in various social comparisons, and interpersonal distance has an impact on the evaluation of social comparison outcomes. This study found that the level of intimacy in relationships affects how individuals process social comparison outcomes, and even in non-competitive situations, people tend to compare themselves to strangers.
CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY
(2022)
Article
Psychology, Experimental
Catherine J. Norris, Emily Wu
Summary: Ambivalence, feeling both positivity and negativity at the same time, is an uncomfortable but necessary catalyst for behavior change. Instructed emotion regulation of positive and negative affect can reduce feelings of ambivalence, with negative emotions being harder to regulate compared to positive ones, indicating a negativity bias in affective processing.
Article
Neurosciences
Jin Li, Nian Xu, Yiping Zhong
Summary: Individuals tend to reciprocate cooperative or aggressive actions based on their reciprocity preferences, which are positively correlated with their reciprocity expectations. Monetary payoffs can heighten expectations of negative reciprocity, particularly at the automatic outcome processing stage.
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
(2021)
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Johanna C. C. Glimmerveen, Joseph H. R. Maes, Erik Bulten, Inge A. Scheper, Inti A. Brazil
Summary: Psychopathic offenders are capable of adapting their behavior to environmental contingencies when positive reinforcers with sufficiently high subjective values are utilized.
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Shuyuan Xu, Yuyan Sun, Min Huang, Yanhong Huang, Jing Han, Xuemei Tang, Wei Ren
Summary: The study found that different reinforcement types did not show significant differences in learning signals, but negative reinforcement induced smaller FRN waves, stronger positive emotions and happiness, and less fatigue after learning.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2021)
Article
Computer Science, Cybernetics
Jiasen Li, Huiping Yao
Summary: This study utilized ERPs and sLORETA to investigate the neural activity of drug addicts in response to monetary incentives. Results showed that heroin addicts had faster reactions and exhibited abnormalities in reward-related brain regions, leading to insensitivity to potential punishments and deficits in impulsive control. These findings contribute to the understanding of the neural basis of reward anticipation and processing in drug addicts and provide implications for withdrawal treatment.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTATIONAL SOCIAL SYSTEMS
(2023)
Article
Psychology, Biological
Ruth Garrido-Chaves, Mario Perez-Alarcon, Vanesa Perez, Vanesa Hidalgo, Matias M. Pulopulos, Alicia Salvador
Summary: Previous research has shown gender-related psychobiological differences in risky and competitive strategies that affect win and loss outcomes. Women were found to have greater sensitivity to losses than to wins during the decision-making task, as reflected in the FRN component, but there were no significant gender differences observed in behavioral performance, P3 component, or directly in the feedback processing stage for the FRN or P3.
Article
Psychiatry
Shuguang Wei, Zhaoxia Xue, Wujun Sun, Jie Han, Haiyan Wu, Xun Liu
Summary: Research suggests that women with MA use disorder show neurophysiological dysfunction in reward and punishment processing, with stronger anticipation of reward and avoidance of harm. These findings can be targeted for intervention design.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
(2021)
Article
Neurosciences
Jiehui Zheng, Lei Wang, Liang Meng
Summary: This study found that response consistency affects the first mover's anticipation and evaluation of the final feedback in gambling, with inconsistent responses leading to a stronger feedback-related negativity and consistent responses producing a more pronounced d-FRN during the feedback stage.
FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
(2022)
Review
Behavioral Sciences
Alessio Bellato, Luke Norman, Iman Idrees, Carolina Y. Ogawa, Alice Waitt, Pedro F. Zuccolo, Charlotte Tye, Joaquim Radua, Madeleine J. Groom, Elizabeth Shephard
Summary: The study found increased electrophysiological markers of performance monitoring in OCD and GTS, while decreased markers in ADHD and autism.
NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS
(2021)
Article
Biology
Romy Fromer, Matthew R. Nassar, Rasmus Bruckner, Birgit Sturmer, Werner Sommer, Nick Yeung
Summary: Surprise in learning is influenced by internal monitoring of performance evaluation, where individuals adjust their learning process based on outcome predictions and confidence levels. Research shows that individuals who can calibrate their confidence levels to the precision of their outcome predictions learn more quickly.
Article
Neurosciences
Yan Gu, Tianliang Liu, Xuemeng Zhang, Quanshan Long, Na Hu, Yi Zhang, Antao Chen
Summary: FRN is believed to encode reward prediction error, but studies have conflicting views on whether it reflects unsigned or signed prediction error. It is unclear if FRN is sensitive to the interaction of outcome valence and prediction error, or simply responsive to the absolute size of prediction error. The study demonstrates that FRN is sensitive to outcome valence and expectancy violation, exhibiting a preferential response depending on the emphasized dimension.
Article
Neurosciences
Tao Xia, Zhengyang Qi, Jiaxin Shi, Mingming Zhang, Wenbo Luo
FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE
(2018)
Editorial Material
Neurosciences
Di Zhao, Mingming Zhang, Wenbo Luo, Tifei Yuan
FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
(2018)
Article
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Mingming Zhang, Di Zhao, Zhao Zhang, Xinyu Cao, Lu Yin, Yi Liu, Ti-Fei Yuan, Wenbo Luo
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Huoyin Zhang, Mingming Zhang, Jiachen Lu, Lili Zhao, Dongfang Zhao, Chuan Xiao, Ruolei Gu, Wenbo Luo
COGNITIVE AFFECTIVE & BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
(2020)
Article
Neurosciences
Zhao Zhang, Weiqi He, Yuchen Li, Mingming Zhang, Wenbo Luo
FRONTIERS IN NEURAL CIRCUITS
(2020)
Article
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Mingming Zhang, Lu Yu, Keye Zhang, Bixuan Du, Bin Zhan, Shaohua Chen, Xiuhao Jiang, Shuai Guo, Jiafeng Zhao, Yang Wang, Bin Wang, Shenglan Liu, Wenbo Luo
Letter
Psychiatry
Ping Li, Mingming Zhang, Chuanlin Zhu, Yexi Leng, Yuchen Li, Weiqi He, Wenbo Luo
PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH
(2021)
Article
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Di Zhao, Mingming Zhang, Weiwen Tian, Xinyu Cao, Lu Yin, Yi Liu, Tian-Le Xu, Wenbo Luo, Ti-Fei Yuan
Summary: Previous studies have shown that abstinence can lead to an increase in cue-induced drug craving, including for nicotine, alcohol, cocaine, and methamphetamine. However, research on methamphetamine craving incubation has not fully explored the neuropsychological and electrophysiological dynamics associated with this process. This study utilized EEG signals to track cue-induced craving in individuals with methamphetamine use disorder, finding that craving peaked at 1-3 months of abstinence along with changes in sleep quality and specific brain wave frequencies, suggesting potential neurophysiological signatures for identifying those at risk for relapse and guiding future therapeutic interventions.
MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
(2021)
Article
Neurosciences
Yiwen Li, Mingming Zhang, Shuaicheng Liu, Wenbo Luo
Summary: This study investigated the temporal dynamics of different dimensional face information (such as age, gender, emotion, and identity) in neural responses. The results revealed that facial emotion was processed before facial identity and lasted for a long time.
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Mingming Zhang, Ping Li, Lu Yu, Jie Ren, Shuxin Jia, Chaolun Wang, Weiqi He, Wenbo Luo
Summary: In daily life, individuals need to recognize and update emotional information from others' changing body expressions. This study found that emotional bodies can enhance working memory performance, highlighting the importance of emotional action information in working memory.
Article
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Mingming Zhang, Yanan Zhou, Xinye Xu, Ziwei Ren, Yihan Zhang, Shenglan Liu, Wenbo Luo
Summary: In this study, a multi-view emotional expressions dataset (MEED) based on 2D pose estimation was created, including six emotions and neutral body movements. This dataset has broad applications in research fields such as affective computing, human-computer interaction, social neuroscience, and psychiatry.
Article
Substance Abuse
Xi He, Di Zhao, Mingming Zhang, Yexi Leng, Weiqi He
Summary: In this study, abstinent individuals with MUD exhibited more severe cognitive disinhibition, especially in inhibitory control, when exposed to drug-related cues. The findings suggest that cue exposure triggers increased impulsivity in abstinent individuals with MUD, highlighting the need for enhanced monitoring and intervention for impulsive behavior in this population.
JOURNAL OF STUDIES ON ALCOHOL AND DRUGS
(2021)
Article
Psychology, Experimental
Mingming Zhang, Tiantian Liu, Yule Jin, Weiqi Hea, Yuxia Huang, Wenbo Luo