Project Details
The neural underpinnings of the interaction between the cognitive control of emotions and value-based decision-making
Applicant
Dr. Carmen Morawetz
Subject Area
General, Cognitive and Mathematical Psychology
Human Cognitive and Systems Neuroscience
Human Cognitive and Systems Neuroscience
Term
from 2016 to 2018
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 285863256
Much of our daily life is driven by the prospect of rewards and thus, involves constant decision-making to achieve rewards. Reward valuation is tightly linked to emotions, e.g. the outcome of a decision could result in positive/negative emotions such as joy/anger. Moreover, our daily mood, stress level as well as current feelings may also affect the decisions we make. The relationship between emotion and decision-making has been investigated on a theoretical and behavioural level; the neural mechanisms underlying it, however, remain mostly unclear. Value-based decision-making can be defined as the process of making a choice from at least two alternatives on the basis of a subjective value that one places on them. This choice behaviour can be influenced either by expected and/or immediate emotions. Expected emotions include cognitive predictions about the emotional consequences of decision outcomes. Immediate emotions are real emotions experienced at the time of decision-making. We hypothesize that internal emotional states can be cognitively modulated and thereby affect other processes involved in value-based decision-making. Thus, the regulation of emotions (e.g., reappraisal) could be used as a means to investigate the influence of emotions on value-based decision-making. The proposed program is set out to systematically investigate 1) the effect of immediate emotions on value-based decision-making; 2) the modulatory effect of reappraisal of immediate emotions on decision-making; and 3) the impact of reappraisal goals such as up- and down-regulation of emotions on the process of decision-making. Therefore, we planned a series of three separate behavioural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiments in healthy participants. In experiment 1 we will investigate how emotion regulation affects temporal discounting (valuation of options). In experiment 2 we will examine the effect of emotion regulation on decision-making under risk (action selection). In experiment 3 we are interested in carry-over effects of emotion regulation on the processing of secondary outcomes (expected consequences and outcome evaluation). All three experiments will involve a multi-methodological approach combing computational modelling of decision-making behaviour with standard univariate analyses and multivariate pattern classification analyses of fMRI data. Such model-based analyses of decision-making facilitate the detection of even relatively subtle changes in choice behaviour, both between and within individuals. Together, the proposed experiments aim at a systematic, mechanistic characterization of emotion regulation effects on decision-making across different types of decisions and reappraisal goals.
DFG Programme
Research Grants