Journal article
Successful inhibitory control over an immediate reward is associated with attentional disengagement in visual processing areas
DA O'Connor, S Rossiter, M Yücel, DI Lubman, R Hester
Neuroimage | ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE | Published : 2012
Abstract
We examined the neural basis of the capacity to resist an immediately rewarding stimulus in order to obtain a larger delayed reward. This was investigated with a Go/No-go task employing No-go targets that provided two types of reward outcomes. These were contingent on inhibitory control performance: failure to inhibit Reward No-go targets provided a small monetary reward with immediate feedback; while successful inhibitory control resulted in larger rewards with delayed feedback based on the highest number of consecutive inhibitions. We observed faster Go trial responses with maintained levels of inhibition accuracy during the Reward No-go condition compared to a neutral No-go condition. Com..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was supported by Australian Research Council grant DP1092852 and National Health and Medical Research Council Grant (628495) and Fellowship (519730-R.H.; 509345-M.Y.). The assistance of Michael Kean, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Flemington, is gratefully acknowledged.