Pharmacological modulation of subliminal learning in Parkinson's and Tourette's syndromes
- 10 November 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 106 (45) , 19179-19184
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0904035106
Abstract
Theories of instrumental learning aim to elucidate the mechanisms that integrate success and failure to improve future decisions. One computational solution consists of updating the value of choices in proportion to reward prediction errors, which are potentially encoded in dopamine signals. Accordingly, drugs that modulate dopamine transmission were shown to impact instrumental learning performance. However, whether these drugs act on conscious or subconscious learning processes remains unclear. To address this issue, we examined the effects of dopamine-related medications in a subliminal instrumental learning paradigm. To assess generality of dopamine implication, we tested both dopamine enhancers in Parkinson's disease (PD) and dopamine blockers in Tourette's syndrome (TS). During the task, patients had to learn from monetary outcomes the expected value of a risky choice. The different outcomes (rewards and punishments) were announced by visual cues, which were masked such that patients could not consciously perceive them. Boosting dopamine transmission in PD patients improved reward learning but worsened punishment avoidance. Conversely, blocking dopamine transmission in TS patients favored punishment avoidance but impaired reward seeking. These results thus extend previous findings in PD to subliminal situations and to another pathological condition, TS. More generally, they suggest that pharmacological manipulation of dopamine transmission can subconsciously drive us to either get more rewards or avoid more punishments.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rewards Evoke Learning of Unconsciously Processed Visual Stimuli in Adult HumansNeuron, 2009
- Subliminal Instrumental Conditioning Demonstrated in the Human BrainNeuron, 2008
- Aversive Learning Enhances Perceptual and Cortical Discrimination of Indiscriminable Odor CuesScience, 2008
- Disconnecting force from money: effects of basal ganglia damage on incentive motivationBrain, 2008
- Medication-related impulse control and repetitive behaviors in Parkinson??s diseaseCurrent Opinion in Neurology, 2007
- Levels of processing during non-conscious perception: a critical review of visual maskingPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2007
- Dopamine-dependent prediction errors underpin reward-seeking behaviour in humansNature, 2006
- Tourette's syndrome: from behaviour to biologyThe Lancet Neurology, 2005
- Dynamic Dopamine Modulation in the Basal Ganglia: A Neurocomputational Account of Cognitive Deficits in Medicated and Nonmedicated ParkinsonismJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2005
- A Neural Substrate of Prediction and RewardScience, 1997