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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Emergence of β-Band Oscillations in the Aged Rat Amygdala during Discrimination Learning and Decision Making Tasks

Samson, Rachel D., Lester, Adam W., Duarte, Leroy, Venkatesh, Anu, Barnes, Carol A. January 2017 (has links)
Older adults tend to use strategies that differ from those used by young adults to solve decision-making tasks. MRI experiments suggest that altered strategy use during aging can be accompanied by a change in extent of activation of a given brain region, inter-hemispheric bilateralization or added brain structures. It has been suggested that these changes reflect compensation for less effective networks to enable optimal performance. One way that communication can be influenced within and between brain networks is through oscillatory events that help structure and synchronize incoming and outgoing information. It is unknown how aging impacts local oscillatory activity within the basolateral complex of the amygdala (BLA). The present study recorded local field potentials (LFPs) and single units in old and young rats during the performance of tasks that involve discrimination learning and probabilistic decision making. Wefound task-and age-specific increases in power selectively within the beta range (15-30 Hz). The increased beta power occurred after lever presses, as old animals reached the goal location. Periods of high-power beta developed over training days in the aged rats, and was greatest in early trials of a session. beta Power was also greater after pressing for the large reward option. These data suggest that aging of BLA networks results in strengthened synchrony of beta oscillations when older animals are learning or deciding between rewards of different size. Whether this increased synchrony reflects the neural basis of a compensatory strategy change of old animals in reward-based decision-making tasks, remains to be verified.
12

Tomada de decisão mediada por tempo e probabilidade em ratos expostos ao álcool antes do nascimento / Decision making mediated by time and probability in rats prenatally exposed to ethanol

Johann, Stéfano Pupe January 2011 (has links)
Fatores como o tempo de espera ou o risco a ser enfrentado por uma recompensa maior têm um efeito importante e, por vezes, paradoxal no processo de tomada de decisão. O Capítulo I apresenta uma discussão teórica sobre a tomada de decisão mediada por esses dois fatores, bem como sua interligação com o conceito de impulsividade e o Transtorno de Déficit de Atenção e Hiperatividade (TDAH). O Capítulo II oferece uma aplicação desses conceitos em um modelo animal do espectro da Síndrome Alcoólica Fetal, condição que apresenta algumas características semelhantes ao TDAH. Utilizando ratos expostos ao álcool no período pré-natal, duas tarefas de tomada de decisão mediada por tempo ou probabilidade foram usadas para testar se esses animais apresentam diferenças em seus padrões de escolha. Não foram encontradas diferenças significativas entre grupos controle e experimentais. Futuros estudos com outros protocolos, espécies e/ou linhagens são desejáveis. / Factors such as the time to wait, or the risk to be faced for a bigger reward have an important and, sometimes, paradoxical effect on the decision making process. Chapter I presents a theoretical discussion about decision making mediated by these two factors, as well as how they relate to the concept of impulsivity and the Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Chapter II offers a practical application of these concepts in an animal model of the spectrum of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, a condition that presents some similar characterstics in comparison to ADHD. Using rats prenatally exposed to ethanol, two decision making tasks, mediated by time or probability, were used to test if these animals show any difference in their patterns of choice. No significant differences were found between control and experimental groups. Future studies with other protocols, species and/or strains are desirable.
13

Tomada de decisão mediada por tempo e probabilidade em ratos expostos ao álcool antes do nascimento / Decision making mediated by time and probability in rats prenatally exposed to ethanol

Johann, Stéfano Pupe January 2011 (has links)
Fatores como o tempo de espera ou o risco a ser enfrentado por uma recompensa maior têm um efeito importante e, por vezes, paradoxal no processo de tomada de decisão. O Capítulo I apresenta uma discussão teórica sobre a tomada de decisão mediada por esses dois fatores, bem como sua interligação com o conceito de impulsividade e o Transtorno de Déficit de Atenção e Hiperatividade (TDAH). O Capítulo II oferece uma aplicação desses conceitos em um modelo animal do espectro da Síndrome Alcoólica Fetal, condição que apresenta algumas características semelhantes ao TDAH. Utilizando ratos expostos ao álcool no período pré-natal, duas tarefas de tomada de decisão mediada por tempo ou probabilidade foram usadas para testar se esses animais apresentam diferenças em seus padrões de escolha. Não foram encontradas diferenças significativas entre grupos controle e experimentais. Futuros estudos com outros protocolos, espécies e/ou linhagens são desejáveis. / Factors such as the time to wait, or the risk to be faced for a bigger reward have an important and, sometimes, paradoxical effect on the decision making process. Chapter I presents a theoretical discussion about decision making mediated by these two factors, as well as how they relate to the concept of impulsivity and the Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Chapter II offers a practical application of these concepts in an animal model of the spectrum of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, a condition that presents some similar characterstics in comparison to ADHD. Using rats prenatally exposed to ethanol, two decision making tasks, mediated by time or probability, were used to test if these animals show any difference in their patterns of choice. No significant differences were found between control and experimental groups. Future studies with other protocols, species and/or strains are desirable.
14

Tomada de decisão mediada por tempo e probabilidade em ratos expostos ao álcool antes do nascimento / Decision making mediated by time and probability in rats prenatally exposed to ethanol

Johann, Stéfano Pupe January 2011 (has links)
Fatores como o tempo de espera ou o risco a ser enfrentado por uma recompensa maior têm um efeito importante e, por vezes, paradoxal no processo de tomada de decisão. O Capítulo I apresenta uma discussão teórica sobre a tomada de decisão mediada por esses dois fatores, bem como sua interligação com o conceito de impulsividade e o Transtorno de Déficit de Atenção e Hiperatividade (TDAH). O Capítulo II oferece uma aplicação desses conceitos em um modelo animal do espectro da Síndrome Alcoólica Fetal, condição que apresenta algumas características semelhantes ao TDAH. Utilizando ratos expostos ao álcool no período pré-natal, duas tarefas de tomada de decisão mediada por tempo ou probabilidade foram usadas para testar se esses animais apresentam diferenças em seus padrões de escolha. Não foram encontradas diferenças significativas entre grupos controle e experimentais. Futuros estudos com outros protocolos, espécies e/ou linhagens são desejáveis. / Factors such as the time to wait, or the risk to be faced for a bigger reward have an important and, sometimes, paradoxical effect on the decision making process. Chapter I presents a theoretical discussion about decision making mediated by these two factors, as well as how they relate to the concept of impulsivity and the Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Chapter II offers a practical application of these concepts in an animal model of the spectrum of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, a condition that presents some similar characterstics in comparison to ADHD. Using rats prenatally exposed to ethanol, two decision making tasks, mediated by time or probability, were used to test if these animals show any difference in their patterns of choice. No significant differences were found between control and experimental groups. Future studies with other protocols, species and/or strains are desirable.
15

No Differences in Value-Based Decision-Making Due to Use of Oral Contraceptives

Lewis, Carolin A., Kimmig, Ann-Christin S., Kroemer, Nils B., Pooseh, Shakoor, Smolka, Michael N., Sacher, Julia, Derntl, Birgit 07 June 2023 (has links)
Fluctuating ovarian hormones have been shown to affect decision-making processes in women. While emerging evidence suggests effects of endogenous ovarian hormones such as estradiol and progesterone on value-based decision-making in women, the impact of exogenous synthetic hormones, as in most oral contraceptives, is not clear. In a between-subjects design, we assessed measures of value-based decision-making in three groups of women aged 18 to 29 years, during (1) active oral contraceptive intake (N = 22), (2) the early follicular phase of the natural menstrual cycle (N = 20), and (3) the periovulatory phase of the natural menstrual cycle (N = 20). Estradiol, progesterone, testosterone, and sex-hormone binding globulin levels were assessed in all groups via blood samples. We used a test battery which measured different facets of value-based decision-making: delay discounting, risk-aversion, risk-seeking, and loss aversion. While hormonal levels did show the expected patterns for the three groups, there were no differences in value-based decision-making parameters. Consequently, Bayes factors showed conclusive evidence in support of the null hypothesis. We conclude that women on oral contraceptives show no differences in value-based decision-making compared to the early follicular and periovulatory natural menstrual cycle phases.
16

Better together? Social distance affects joint probability discounting

Schwenke, Diana, Senftleben, Ulrike, Scherbaum, Stefan 06 June 2024 (has links)
Deciding together is common in our everyday life. However, the process of this joint decision-making plays out across different levels, for example language, intonation, or non-verbal behaviour. Here we focused on non-verbal interaction dynamics between two participants in probability discounting. We applied a gamified decision-making task in which participants performed a series of choices between a small but safe and a large but risky reward. In two experiments, we found that joint decision-making resulted in lower discounting and higher efficiency. In order to understand the underlying mechanisms in greater detail, we studied through which process this variation occurred and whether this process would be modulated by the social distance between both participants. Our findings suggested that socially close participants managed to reduce their discounting by interactive processes while socially distant participants were influenced by the social context itself. However, a higher level of efficiency was achieved through interactive processes for both groups. In summary, this study served as a fine-grained investigation of collaborative interaction processes and its significant impact on the outcome of choices with probabilistic consequences.

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