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      Critical roles for anterior insula and dorsal striatum in punishment-based avoidance learning.

      Neuron
      Adult, Atrophy, pathology, Avoidance Learning, physiology, Brain Mapping, Brain Neoplasms, physiopathology, psychology, Cerebral Cortex, blood supply, Corpus Striatum, Female, Humans, Huntington Disease, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Oxygen, Punishment

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          Abstract

          The division of human learning systems into reward and punishment opponent modules is still a debated issue. While the implication of ventral prefrontostriatal circuits in reward-based learning is well established, the neural underpinnings of punishment-based learning remain unclear. To elucidate the causal implication of brain regions that were related to punishment learning in a previous functional neuroimaging study, we tested the effects of brain damage on behavioral performance, using the same task contrasting monetary gains and losses. Cortical and subcortical candidate regions, the anterior insula and dorsal striatum, were assessed in patients presenting brain tumor and Huntington disease, respectively. Both groups exhibited selective impairment of punishment-based learning. Computational modeling suggested complementary roles for these structures: the anterior insula might be involved in learning the negative value of loss-predicting cues, whereas the dorsal striatum might be involved in choosing between those cues so as to avoid the worst. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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