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Brain-Behavior Associations for Risk Taking Depend on the Measures Used to Capture Individual Differences
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 4607111
Author(s) Tisdall, Loreen; Frey, Renato; Horn, Andreas; Ostwald, Dirk; Horvath, Lilla; Pedroni, Andreas; Rieskamp, Jörg; Blankenburg, Felix; Hertwig, Ralph; Mata, Rui
Author(s) at UniBasel Mata, Rui
Tisdall, Loreen
Frey, Renato
Rieskamp, Jörg
Year 2020
Title Brain-Behavior Associations for Risk Taking Depend on the Measures Used to Capture Individual Differences
Journal Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
Volume 14
Pages / Article-Number 587152
Keywords BART; brain–behavior; fMRI; individual differences; monetary gambles; nucleus accumbens; risk taking
Abstract Maladaptive risk taking can have severe individual and societal consequences; thus, individual differences are prominent targets for intervention and prevention. Although brain activation has been shown to be associated with individual differences in risk taking, the directionality of the reported brainâEuro"behavior associations is less clear. Here, we argue that one aspect contributing to the mixed results is the low convergence between risk-taking measures, especially between the behavioral tasks used to elicit neural functional markers. To address this question, we analyzed within-participant neuroimaging data for two widely used risk-taking tasks collected from the imaging subsample of the BaselâEuro"Berlin Risk Study (N = 116 young human adults). Focusing on core brain regions implicated in risk taking (nucleus accumbens, anterior insula, and anterior cingulate cortex), for the two tasks, we examined group-level activation for risky versus safe choices, as well as associations between local functional markers and various risk-related outcomes, including psychometrically derived risk preference factors. While we observed common group-level activation in the two tasks (notably increased nucleus accumbens activation), individual differences analyses support the idea that the presence and directionality of associations between brain activation and risk taking varies as a function of the risk-taking measures used to capture individual differences. Our results have methodological implications for the use of brain markers for intervention or prevention.
Publisher Frontiers Media
ISSN/ISBN 1662-5153
edoc-URL https://edoc.unibas.ch/79535/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.3389/fnbeh.2020.587152
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33281576
ISI-Number WOS:000594363700001
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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