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J Neurophysiol (April 1, 2009). doi:10.1152/jn.90909.2008
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Submitted on August 1, 2008
Revised on March 11, 2009
Accepted on March 29, 2009

Segregated and integrated coding of reward and punishment in the cingulate cortex

Juri Fujiwara1, Philippe N. Tobler2, Masoto Taira3, Toshio Iijima4, and Ken-Ichiro Tsutsui1*

1 Tohoku Univ Grad Schl Life Sci
2 University of Cambridge
3 Nihon University School of Medicine
4 Tohoku University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: tsutsui{at}m.tains.tohoku.ac.jp.

Affective stimuli fall into two major classes, reward and punishment, both of which are processed by the cingulate cortex. However, it is unclear whether the positive and negative affective values of monetary reward and punishment are processed by separate or common subregions of the cingulate cortex. We performed a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study using a free-choice task, and compared cingulate activations for different levels of monetary gain and loss. Gain-specific activation (increasing activation for increasing gain, but no activation change in relation to loss) occurred mainly in the anterior part of the anterior cingulate and in the posterior cingulate cortex. Conversely, loss-specific activation (increasing activation for increasing loss, but no activation change in relation to gain) occurred in-between these areas, in the middle and posterior part of the anterior cingulate. Integrated coding of gain and loss (increasing activation throughout the full range, from biggest loss to biggest gain) occurred in the dorsal part of the anterior cingulate, at the border with medial prefrontal cortex. Finally, unspecific activation increases to both gains and losses (increasing activation to increasing gains and increasing losses, possibly reflecting attention) occurred in dorsal and middle regions of the cingulate cortex. Together, these results suggest separate and common coding of monetary reward and punishment in distinct subregions of the cingulate cortex. Further meta-analysis suggested that the presently found reward- and punishment-specific areas overlapped with those processing positive and negative emotions, respectively.







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