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Neurobehavioural characterisation and stratification of reinforcement-related behaviour.

Tianye JiaAlex IngErin Burke QuinlanNicole TayQiang LuoFrancesca BiondoTobias BanaschewskiGareth J BarkerArun L W BokdeUli BrombergChristian BüchelSylvane DesrivieresJianfeng FengHerta FlorAntoine GrigisHugh GaravanPenny GowlandAndreas HeinzBernd IttermannJean-Luc MartinotMarie-Laure Paillère MartinotFrauke NeesDimitri Papadopoulos OrfanosTomáš PausLuise PoustkaJuliane Hilde FröhnerMichael N SmolkaHenrik WalterRobert WhelanGunter Schumannnull null
Published in: Nature human behaviour (2020)
Reinforcement-related cognitive processes, such as reward processing, inhibitory control and social-emotional regulation are critical components of externalising and internalising behaviours. It is unclear to what extent the deficit in each of these processes contributes to individual behavioural symptoms, how their neural substrates give rise to distinct behavioural outcomes and whether neural activation profiles across different reinforcement-related processes might differentiate individual behaviours. We created a statistical framework that enabled us to directly compare functional brain activation during reward anticipation, motor inhibition and viewing emotional faces in the European IMAGEN cohort of 2,000 14-year-old adolescents. We observe significant correlations and modulation of reward anticipation and motor inhibition networks in hyperactivity, impulsivity, inattentive behaviour and conduct symptoms, and we describe neural signatures across cognitive tasks that differentiate these behaviours. We thus characterise shared and distinct functional brain activation patterns underling different externalising symptoms and identify neural stratification markers, while accounting for clinically observed comorbidity.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • resting state
  • healthcare
  • type diabetes
  • physical activity
  • working memory
  • functional connectivity
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • metabolic syndrome
  • genome wide