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Published May 2015 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Differentiating neural systems mediating the acquisition vs. expression of goal-directed and habitual behavioral control

Abstract

Considerable behavioral data indicate that operant actions can become habitual, as demonstrated by insensitivity to changes in the action–outcome contingency and in subjective outcome values. Notably, although several studies have investigated the neural substrates of habits, none has clearly differentiated the areas of the human brain that support habit formation from those that implement habitual control. We scanned participants with functional magnetic resonance imaging as they learned and performed an operant task in which the conditional structure of the environment encouraged either goal-directed encoding of the consequences of actions, or a habit-like mapping of actions to antecedent cues. Participants were also scanned during a subsequent assessment of insensitivity to outcome devaluation. We identified dissociable roles of the cerebellum and ventral striatum, across learning and test performance, in behavioral insensitivity to outcome devaluation. We also showed that the inferior parietal lobule (an area previously implicated in several aspects of goal-directed action selection, including the attribution of intent and awareness of agency) predicted sensitivity to outcome devaluation. Finally, we revealed a potential functional homology between the human subgenual cortex and rodent infralimbic cortex in the implementation of habitual control. In summary, our findings suggested a broad systems division, at the cortical and subcortical levels, between brain areas mediating the encoding and expression of action–outcome and stimulus–response associations.

Additional Information

© 2015 Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Received 3 October 2014, revised 6 March 2015, accepted 12 March 2015. This work was supported by a grant from the Wellcome Trust and by an NIH grant (DA033077-01) to J.P.O'D. There are no conflicts of interest.

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August 22, 2023
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