The present research explored the effect of cortical lateralisation activity during the decisional process in a gambling context. We supposed that increasing of the left DLPFC activity and personality trait make subjects’ strategies more disadvantageous and “gambling” during an online game. Twenty-one subjects were tested using the IGT and GO/noGo task while the EEG was registered and alpha-band modulation was considered. Secondly, the Behavioral Activation System (BAS)/Behavioral Inhibition System (BIS) scale was use for testing the effect of reward sensitivity and metacognitive questionnaire was applied. It was found that high-BAS subjects increased their tendency to opt in favour of the immediate reward rather than the long-term option, that it was correlate with a significant increasing of the left-hemisphere activation in response to immediate reward choices if compared to low-BAS subjects. Finally, they tended to have difficulties to inhibit the automatic response, and they show a dysfunctional metacognition abilities. A reward bias effect was supposed to explain both the bad strategy and the unbalanced hemispheric activation for high-BAS and more risk-taking subjects. These findings could have important repercussions in the social context for the prevention of dysfunctional behaviours that affect compulsive disorders like new forms of addiction.

Finocchiaro, R., Pecoraro, A., Balconi, M., Reward Sensitivity and “unbalance” cortical effect as a biomarker of new addictions. A multi-method study, Poster, in Programma del «60° Congresso Nazionale SINC - Società Italiana di Neurofisiologia Clinica», (Verona, 20-23 May 2015), PTS, Roma 2015: 31-31 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/70886]

Reward Sensitivity and “unbalance” cortical effect as a biomarker of new addictions. A multi-method study

Finocchiaro, Roberta;Balconi, Michela
2015

Abstract

The present research explored the effect of cortical lateralisation activity during the decisional process in a gambling context. We supposed that increasing of the left DLPFC activity and personality trait make subjects’ strategies more disadvantageous and “gambling” during an online game. Twenty-one subjects were tested using the IGT and GO/noGo task while the EEG was registered and alpha-band modulation was considered. Secondly, the Behavioral Activation System (BAS)/Behavioral Inhibition System (BIS) scale was use for testing the effect of reward sensitivity and metacognitive questionnaire was applied. It was found that high-BAS subjects increased their tendency to opt in favour of the immediate reward rather than the long-term option, that it was correlate with a significant increasing of the left-hemisphere activation in response to immediate reward choices if compared to low-BAS subjects. Finally, they tended to have difficulties to inhibit the automatic response, and they show a dysfunctional metacognition abilities. A reward bias effect was supposed to explain both the bad strategy and the unbalanced hemispheric activation for high-BAS and more risk-taking subjects. These findings could have important repercussions in the social context for the prevention of dysfunctional behaviours that affect compulsive disorders like new forms of addiction.
2015
Inglese
Programma del «60° Congresso Nazionale SINC - Società Italiana di Neurofisiologia Clinica»
60° Congresso Nazionale SINC - Società Italiana di Neurofisiologia Clinica
Verona
Poster
20-mag-2015
23-mag-2015
Finocchiaro, R., Pecoraro, A., Balconi, M., Reward Sensitivity and “unbalance” cortical effect as a biomarker of new addictions. A multi-method study, Poster, in Programma del «60° Congresso Nazionale SINC - Società Italiana di Neurofisiologia Clinica», (Verona, 20-23 May 2015), PTS, Roma 2015: 31-31 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/70886]
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/70886
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact