Abstract
The ability to enhance motivated performance through incentives is crucial to guide and ultimately optimise the outcome of goal-directed behaviour. It remains largely unclear how motivated behaviour and performance develops particularly across adolescence. Here, we used computational fMRI to assess how response speed and its underlying neural circuitry are modulated by reward and loss in a monetary incentive delay paradigm. We demonstrate that maturational fine-tuning of functional coupling within the cortico-striatal incentive circuitry from adolescence to adulthood facilitates the ability to enhance performance selectively for higher subjective values. Additionally, during feedback, we found developmental sex differences of striatal representations of reward prediction errors in an exploratory analysis. Our findings suggest that a reduced capacity to utilise subjective value for motivated behaviour in adolescence is rooted in immature information processing in the incentive system. This indicates that the neurocircuitry for coordination of incentivised, motivated cognitive control acts as a bottleneck for behavioural adjustments in adolescence.
Highlights
Goal-directed behaviour depends fundamentally on the capacity to attribute significance to stimuli in the environment and adapt performance
Our findings suggest that a reduced capacity to utilize subjective value for motivated behaviour in adolescence is rooted in immature information processing in the incentive system
Given the large age range of our participants and the use of reward and loss trials, our results critically extend these findings by characterizing connectivity changes from adolescence into adulthood and by being able to show that the connectivity changes are independent of approach or avoidance behaviour
Summary
Goal-directed behaviour depends fundamentally on the capacity to attribute significance to stimuli in the environment and adapt performance . Recent studies reported selective performance improvements in reward and punishment contexts across development (Hallquist et al, 2018; Insel et al, 2017) that were linked to connectivity changes in the neural circuitry supporting motivation and salience processing. Those results are consistent with the idea that the deployment of cognitive resources supporting motivated behaviour emerges along with the maturation of cortico-striatal networks. A weaker effective connectivity between the prefrontal cortex and the VS during anticipation in adolescents than in adults could be indicative of a protracted/late maturation of cortico-striatal circuits across adolescence
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