Brain mechanisms underlying option generation for behaviour

This thesis examines the highly interlinked fields of voluntary action, apathy and option generation. Substantial research have now implicated the medial frontal cortex in voluntary actions, but the exact roles of each region remain unclear. Seeking clarity on this is important because the lack of s...

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Main Author: Ang, Yuen Siang
Other Authors: Husain, Masud ; Kennard, Christopher
Published: University of Oxford 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.757848
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7578482019-02-05T03:29:26ZBrain mechanisms underlying option generation for behaviourAng, Yuen SiangHusain, Masud ; Kennard, Christopher2018This thesis examines the highly interlinked fields of voluntary action, apathy and option generation. Substantial research have now implicated the medial frontal cortex in voluntary actions, but the exact roles of each region remain unclear. Seeking clarity on this is important because the lack of self-generated behaviour is characteristic of apathy, a debilitating condition prevalent in neurodegenerative diseases and occurring to varying degrees in healthy individuals. Unfortunately, the conceptualization of apathy is currently unclear. Proposals of its underlying cognitive mechanisms have also mostly focused on deficits in selecting between options and learning outcomes during feedback. Intriguingly, the possibility that an inability to self-generate options may contribute to apathy has never been examined. This is because neuroscientific research on option generation is sparse. Here, a major contribution was the advancement of our understanding of option generation for behaviour. As there was no suitable objective measure available in the current literature, a simple, quantitative and culture-free task to assess option generation was first developed. The task was then administered to patients with Parkinson‖s disease and utilised in two pharmacological studies of dopamine agonist (cabergoline) and antagonist (haloperidol). These provided the first direct evidence that dopamine modulates option generation for behaviour in humans, specifically in the aspects of fluency (generating many options) and uniqueness (how different each option is from others). The ability to generate options was also found to associate with apathy in the healthy population. Besides that, the multidimensional structure of apathy was examined via the development and rigorous validation of a new questionnaire known as the Apathy Motivation Index. Finally, a functional neuroimaging experiment in healthy individuals revealed that the pre-supplementary motor area plays a key role in planning during volitional decisions of what action to execute. Together, these findings have provided new insights and point to new directions for future work in this field.Cognitive neuroscienceUniversity of Oxfordhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.757848http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:46f4faad-b39d-4d9a-b68b-a765abb32098Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Cognitive neuroscience
spellingShingle Cognitive neuroscience
Ang, Yuen Siang
Brain mechanisms underlying option generation for behaviour
description This thesis examines the highly interlinked fields of voluntary action, apathy and option generation. Substantial research have now implicated the medial frontal cortex in voluntary actions, but the exact roles of each region remain unclear. Seeking clarity on this is important because the lack of self-generated behaviour is characteristic of apathy, a debilitating condition prevalent in neurodegenerative diseases and occurring to varying degrees in healthy individuals. Unfortunately, the conceptualization of apathy is currently unclear. Proposals of its underlying cognitive mechanisms have also mostly focused on deficits in selecting between options and learning outcomes during feedback. Intriguingly, the possibility that an inability to self-generate options may contribute to apathy has never been examined. This is because neuroscientific research on option generation is sparse. Here, a major contribution was the advancement of our understanding of option generation for behaviour. As there was no suitable objective measure available in the current literature, a simple, quantitative and culture-free task to assess option generation was first developed. The task was then administered to patients with Parkinson‖s disease and utilised in two pharmacological studies of dopamine agonist (cabergoline) and antagonist (haloperidol). These provided the first direct evidence that dopamine modulates option generation for behaviour in humans, specifically in the aspects of fluency (generating many options) and uniqueness (how different each option is from others). The ability to generate options was also found to associate with apathy in the healthy population. Besides that, the multidimensional structure of apathy was examined via the development and rigorous validation of a new questionnaire known as the Apathy Motivation Index. Finally, a functional neuroimaging experiment in healthy individuals revealed that the pre-supplementary motor area plays a key role in planning during volitional decisions of what action to execute. Together, these findings have provided new insights and point to new directions for future work in this field.
author2 Husain, Masud ; Kennard, Christopher
author_facet Husain, Masud ; Kennard, Christopher
Ang, Yuen Siang
author Ang, Yuen Siang
author_sort Ang, Yuen Siang
title Brain mechanisms underlying option generation for behaviour
title_short Brain mechanisms underlying option generation for behaviour
title_full Brain mechanisms underlying option generation for behaviour
title_fullStr Brain mechanisms underlying option generation for behaviour
title_full_unstemmed Brain mechanisms underlying option generation for behaviour
title_sort brain mechanisms underlying option generation for behaviour
publisher University of Oxford
publishDate 2018
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.757848
work_keys_str_mv AT angyuensiang brainmechanismsunderlyingoptiongenerationforbehaviour
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