PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Punishment can enhance performance, Nottingham academics find

2013-03-13
(Press-News.org) The stick can work just as well as the carrot in improving our performance, a team of academics at The University of Nottingham has found.

A study led by researchers from the University's School of Psychology, published recently in the Journal of Neuroscience, has shown that punishment can act as a performance enhancer in a similar way to monetary reward.

Dr Marios Philiastides, who led the work, said: "This work reveals important new information about how the brain functions that could lead to new methods of diagnosing neural development disorders such as autism, ADHD and personality disorders, where decision-making processes have been shown to be compromised."

The Nottingham study aimed at looking at how the efficiency with which we make decisions based on ambiguous sensory information — such as visual or auditory — is affected by the potential for, and severity of, anticipated punishment.

To investigate this, they asked participants in the study to perform a simple perceptual task — asking them to judge whether a blurred shape behind a rainy window is a person or something else.

They punished incorrect decisions by imposing monetary penalties. At the same time, they measured the participants' brain activity in response to different amounts of monetary punishment. Brain activity was recorded, non-invasively, using an EEG machine which detects and amplifies brain signals from the surface of the scalp through a set of small electrodes embedded in a swim-like cap fitted on the participants' head.

They found that participants' performance increased systematically as the amount of punishment increased, suggesting that punishment acts as a performance enhancer in a similar way to monetary reward.

At the neural level, the academics identified multiple and distinct brain activations induced by punishment and distributed throughout different areas of the brain. Crucially, the timing of these activations confirmed that the punishment does not influence the way in which the brain processes the sensory evidence but does have an impact on the brain's decision maker responsible for decoding sensory information at a later stage in the decision-making process.

Finally, they showed that those participants who showed the greatest improvements in performance also showed the biggest changes in brain activity. This is a key finding as it provides a potential route to study differences between individuals and their personality traits in order to characterise why some may respond better to reward and punishment than others.

A more thorough understanding of the influence of punishment on decision-making and how we make choices could lead to useful information on how to use incentive-based motivation to encourage certain behaviour.

### The paper, Temporal Characteristics of the Influence of Punishment on Perceptual Decision Making in the Human Brain, is available online via the Journal of Neuroscience. END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Normal prion protein regulates iron metabolism

2013-03-13
An iron imbalance caused by prion proteins collecting in the brain is a likely cause of cell death in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), researchers at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine have found. The breakthrough follows discoveries that certain proteins found in the brains of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's patients also regulate iron. The results suggest that neurotoxicity by the form of iron, called redox-active iron, may be a trait of neurodegenerative conditions in all three diseases, the researchers say. Further, the role of the normal prion protein ...

Ancient Chinese coin found on Kenyan island by Field Museum expedition

2013-03-13
A joint expedition of scientists led by Chapurukha M. Kusimba of The Field Museum and Sloan R. Williams of the University of Illinois at Chicago has unearthed a 600-year-old Chinese coin on the Kenyan island of Manda that shows trade existed between China and east Africa decades before European explorers set sail and changed the map of the world. The coin, a small disk of copper and silver with a square hole in the center so it could be worn on a belt, is called "Yongle Tongbao" and was issued by Emperor Yongle who reigned from 1403-1425AD during the Ming Dynasty. The ...

Answering messages behind the wheel is as dangerous as being twice over the limit

Answering messages behind the wheel is as dangerous as being twice over the limit
2013-03-13
Scientists from various Australian universities in collaboration with the University of Barcelona have compared the effects of mobile use while driving with the effects of alcohol using a simulation. Their experiment demonstrates that using a handsfree kit or sending text messages is the same as being above the legal alcohol limit. The Australian universities of Wollongong, Victoria, Swinburne of Technology, the Institute for breathing and sleep and the University of Barcelona have measured the reaction capacity behind the wheel of twelve healthy volunteers who participated ...

Immune cells cluster and communicate 'like bees,' researcher says

Immune cells cluster and communicate like bees, researcher says
2013-03-13
The immune system's T cells, while coordinating responses to diseases and vaccines, act like honey bees sharing information about the best honey sources, according to a new study by scientists at UC San Francisco. "In the morning, each bee goes looking individually for a sugar source, then comes back to the hive and does a dance in front of the other bees describing the location of what it's found, which helps the hive decide collectively where the best source is," said senior scientist Matthew Krummel, PhD, a UCSF professor of pathology. They don't bust the same ...

UT study identifies ways children can meet recommended activity goals

2013-03-13
KNOXVILLE—Despite overwhelming evidence about the benefits of physical activity for children, most American youngsters are not meeting the federal recommendation of 60 minutes a day. A new study by a team of University of Tennessee researchers has identified specific ways—and estimated minutes for each approach—that can help children achieve the recommended daily physical activity goal. The results of various approaches, ranging from mandatory physical education in school to changes in playground designs, were published recently in the American Journal of Preventive ...

Polo takes the bait

Polo takes the bait
2013-03-13
KANSAS CITY, MO—A seemingly obscure gene in the female fruit fly that is only active in cells that will become eggs has led researchers at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research to the discovery of a atypical protein that lures, traps, and inactivates the powerful Polo kinase, widely considered the master regulator of cell division. Its human homolog, Polo-like kinase-1 (Plk1), is misregulated in many types of cancer. Stowers Investigator and senior author R. Scott Hawley, Ph.D., hopes that this highly selective kinase trap might give drug developers, who are working ...

Medicare spending for advanced cancer not linked to survival differences

2013-03-13
Substantial regional variation in Medicare spending for patients with advanced cancer is not linked to differences in survival, according to a study published March 12 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Cancer care accounts for approximately 10% of Medicare spending, and costs are highest for cancer patients with late-stage disease. Prior research studies have shown that there are large regional differences in spending within the Medicare program, however it is unknown if higher average regional spending for advanced cancer is linked to improved survival ...

Study: Brain imaging after mild head injury/concussion can show lesions

2013-03-13
SAN DIEGO – Brain imaging soon after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) or mild concussion can detect tiny lesions that may eventually provide a target for treating people with mTBI, according to a study released today and that will be presented at the American Academy of Neurology's 65th Annual Meeting in San Diego, March 16 to 23, 2013. Studies of brain tissue once a person has died have shown that different types of lesions are associated with more severe TBI. "Our study suggests that imaging may be used to detect and distinguish between these lesions in a living ...

Preventing HIV infection with anti-HIV drugs in people at risk is cost-effective

2013-03-13
An HIV prevention strategy in which people at risk of becoming exposed to HIV take antiretroviral drugs to reduce their chance of becoming infected (often referred to as pre-exposure prophylaxis or PrEP), may be a cost-effective method of preventing HIV in some settings, according to a study by international researchers published in this week's PLOS Medicine. In an analysis of 13 modelling studies led by Gabriela Gomez from the Department of Global Health, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam/AIGHD in The Netherlands, the authors evaluated the impact of pre-exposure ...

Use of adjunctive antipsychotic medications in depression

2013-03-13
A study published this week in PLOS Medicine finds that while antipsychotic medications are associated with small-to-moderate improvements in depressive symptoms in adults, there is little evidence for improvement on measures of quality of life and these medications are linked to adverse events such as weight gain and sedation. The results of the study, conducted by Glen Spielmans of Metropolitan State University in St. Paul, Minnesota and colleagues, have potential implications for the treatment of depression by providing clinicians with a better understanding of the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Predicting risk in children with heart defects

Test performance improves when children can exercise briefly beforehand, UNCG researchers find

Meet IDEA: An AI assistant to help geoscientists explore Earth and beyond

Ready for market: New process boosts clean, cost-efficient chemical production

Losing weight before IVF may increase chance of pregnancy

New study uncovers how genetics and lifestyle drive the heart disease dilated cardiomyopathy

City of Hope study shows childhood cancer survivors face new health problems later in life

An innovative system that dehydrates fruit without heat

The Optica Foundation names Cara Green Executive Director of Development

Is the 'love hormone,' oxytocin, also the 'friendship hormone'?

Global Virus Network reaffirms support for mRNA vaccines and collaborative vaccine research

Unpacking chaos to protect your morning coffee

Planets without water could still produce certain liquids, a new study finds

Researchers identify key biomarkers for chronic fatigue syndrome

Surprisingly diverse innovations led to dramatically cheaper solar panels

Lab-made sugar-coated particle blocks Covid-19 infection — Possible new treatment on the horizon

Rice’s dean of engineering and computing building new software infrastructure for evolutionary biology

Researchers discover all-new antifungal drug candidate in McMaster’s greenhouse

New quality control for ‘wonder material’ graphene oxide is cheapest and fastest yet

How organic matter traps water in soil — even in the driest conditions

Cancer center taps UTA expert for survivor health study

Big gains in type 1 diabetes glucose-control management in recent years

Researchers unlock safer RNA therapies for inflammatory diseases

New gene linked to aggressive, treatment-resistant prostate cancer

Why oxytocin treatments for social behavior are inconsistent

The ISSCR releases targeted update to the guidelines for stem cell research and clinical translation

In utero brain surgery for Vein of Galen Malformation shows continued promise in new JAMA report

Dollar stores’ food options may not be hurting American diets overall

Georgia and Ukraine launch national Reproducibility Networks with support from the TIER2 project

Under-the-skin electrode allows for real-world epilepsy tracking

[Press-News.org] Punishment can enhance performance, Nottingham academics find