6,894 research outputs found
Mindfulness meditation modulates reward prediction errors in a passive conditioning task
Reinforcement learning models have demonstrated that phasic activity of dopamine neurons during reward expectation encodes information about the predictability of reward and cues that predict reward. Self-control strategies such as those practiced in mindfulness-based approaches is claimed to reduce negative and positive reactions to stimuli suggesting the hypothesis that such training may influence basic reward processing. Using a passive conditioning task and fMRI in a group of experienced mindfulness meditators and age-matched controls, we tested the hypothesis that mindfulness meditation influence reward and reward prediction error (PE) signals. We found diminished positive and negative PE-related blood-oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) responses in the putamen in meditators compared with controls. In the meditator group this decrease in striatal BOLD responses to reward PE was paralleled by increased activity in posterior insula, a primary interoceptive region. Critically, responses in the putamen during early trials of the conditioning procedure (run 1) were elevated in both meditators and controls. Overall, these results provide evidence that experienced mindfulness meditators are able to attenuate reward prediction signals to valenced stimuli, which may be related to interoceptive processes encoded in the posterior insula
The modularity of aesthetic processing and perception in the human brain. Functional neuroimaging studies of neuroaesthetics.
By taking advantage of the advent of functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) this thesis argues that aesthetics belongs in the domain of neurobiology by investigating the different brain processes that are implicated in aesthetic perception from two perspectives. The first experiment explores a specific artistic style that has stressed the problem in the relationship between objects and context. This study investigates the neural responses associated with changes in visual perception, as when objects are placed in their normal context versus when the object-context relationship is violated. Indeed, an aim of this study was to cast a new light on this specific artistic style from a neuroscientific perspective. In contrast to basic rewards, which relate to the reproduction of the species, the evolution of abstract, cognitive representations facilitates the use of a different class of rewards related to hedonics. The second part investigates the hedonic processes involved in aesthetic judgments in order to explore if such higher order cognitive rewards use the same neural reward mechanism as basic rewards. In the first of these experiments we modulate the extent to which the neural correlates of aesthetic preference vary as a function of expertise in architecture. In the second experiment we aim to measure the more general effects of labelling works of art with cognitive semantic information in order to explore the neural modulation of aesthetic preference relative to this information. The main finding of this thesis is that stimulus affective value is represented separately in OFC, with positive reward (increasing aesthetic judgments) being represented in medial OFC and negative reward value is being represented in lateral OFC. Furthermore ventral striatum encode reward expectancy and the predictive value of a stimulus. These findings suggest a dissociation of reward processing with separate neural substrates in reward expectancy and stimulus affective value
The Integer Valued SU(3) Casson Invariant for Brieskorn spheres
We develop techniques for computing the integer valued SU(3) Casson
invariant. Our method involves resolving the singularities in the flat moduli
space using a twisting perturbation and analyzing its effect on the topology of
the perturbed flat moduli space. These techniques, together with Bott-Morse
theory and the splitting principle for spectral flow, are applied to calculate
the invariant for all Brieskorn homology spheres.Comment: 50 pages, 3 figure
Gauge Theoretic Invariants of, Dehn Surgeries on Knots
New methods for computing a variety of gauge theoretic invariants for
homology 3-spheres are developed. These invariants include the Chern-Simons
invariants, the spectral flow of the odd signature operator, and the rho
invariants of irreducible SU(2) representations. These quantities are
calculated for flat SU(2) connections on homology 3-spheres obtained by 1/k
Dehn surgery on (2,q) torus knots. The methods are then applied to compute the
SU(3) gauge theoretic Casson invariant (introduced in [H U Boden and C M
Herald, The SU(3) Casson invariant for integral homology 3--spheres, J. Diff.
Geom. 50 (1998) 147-206]) for Dehn surgeries on (2,q) torus knots for q=3,5,7
and 9.Comment: Version 3: minor corrections from version 2. Published by Geometry
and Topology at http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/gt/GTVol5/paper6.abs.htm
Comment on: Diffusion through a slab
Mahan [J. Math. Phys. 36, 6758 (1995)] has calculated the transmission
coefficient and angular distribution of particles which enter a thick slab at
normal incidence and which diffuse in the slab with linear anisotropic,
non-absorbing, scattering. Using orthogonality relations derived by McCormick &
Kuscer [J. Math. Phys. 6, 1939 (1965); 7, 2036 (1966)] for the eigenfunctions
of the problem, this calculation is generalised to a boundary condition with
particle input at arbitrary angles. It is also shown how to use the
orthogonality relations to relax in a simple way the restriction to a thick
slab.Comment: 3 pages, LaTeX, uses RevTe
Examples of homology 3-spheres whose Chern-Simons function is not Morse-Bott
We construct two homology 3-spheres for which the (unperturbed)
Chern-Simons function is not Morse-Bott. In one case, there is a degenerate
isolated critical point. In the other, a path component of the critical set is
not homeomorphic to a manifold. The examples are surgeries on connected
sums of torus knots.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
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