Amsterdam Medical Centre, Department of Psychiatry, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London, UK
Amsterdam Medical Centre, Department of Psychiatry, Amsterdam
Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London
Section of Brain Maturation, Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London
Correspondence: Dr Nicole Schmitz, Academisch Psychiatrisch Centrum, Meibergdreef 5, Adolescentenkliniek/PA3-136, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Email: N.Schmitz{at}amc.uva.nl
None. Funding detailed in Acknowledgements.
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Lack of social interaction, which is characteristically seen in people with autistic-spectrum disorder, may be caused by malfunctioning of the frontostriatal reward systems. However, no reported in vivo brain imaging studies have investigated reward mechanisms in autistic-spectrum disorder.
Aims
To investigate functional brain activation during reward feedback in people with autistic-spectrum disorder and control individuals.
Method
We used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine the neural substrates of monetary reward in individuals with autistic-spectrum disorder and matched controls.
Results
When rewarded, individuals with autism compared with control individuals showed significantly greater brain activation in the left anterior cingulate gyrus. In addition, activation of this region was negatively correlated with social interaction as measured by the Autism Diagnostic Interview.
Conclusions
In people with autistic-spectrum disorder, achieving reward is associated with significant differences in the activation of areas known to be responsible for attention and arousal, and this may partially underpin some deficits in social behaviour.
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Problems with self- and socially motivated behaviour and social interaction are thought to result from a lack of perceived reward feedback in people with autistic-spectrum disorder.4,5 However, activation of the brains frontostriatal and frontolimbic reward system induced by reward feedback has not been investigated in autistic-spectrum disorder, and differences in social interaction have not been related to brain response with regard to reward. In vivo structural imaging studies have shown that the anatomy of the frontostriatal limbic system is abnormal in autistic-spectrum disorder.6–10 Generalised impairments in stimulus–reward associations have also been found in children4,5 and adults with autism.11 However, nobody has examined brain response to reward in autistic-spectrum disorder using functional imaging.
Thus, we investigated neural substrates of reward feedback in the context of a sustained attention task with monetary reward in adults with autistic-spectrum disorder and matched control individuals using rapid, mixed-trial event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We hypothesised that compared with controls, individuals with autistic-spectrum disorder would show activation differences in frontostriatal limbic brain areas when achieving monetary reward, and that brain areas which were functionally different would be anatomically abnormal. Also, based on prior findings of Schultz et al,11 we hypothesised that differences in brain activation during reward feedback might be related to clinical symptoms as measured by the Autism Diagnostic Interview.12
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All participants underwent a structured clinical examination, including eyesight, neurological examination for handedness (questionnaire) and routine blood tests, to exclude comorbid medical and psychiatric disorders (e.g. epilepsy, tuberous sclerosis and/or psychosis) and biochemical, haematological or chromosomal abnormalities (e.g. fragile-X syndrome) possibly affecting brain function. None of the participants had a history of major medical illness or psychiatric disorder other than autistic-spectrum disorder. The revised short form Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale13 was used to measure IQ. None of the participants was taking medication at the time of testing.
Neuroimaging
All participants were familiarised with the task and scanning procedure
before MRI scanning. Scanning took place at the Neuroimaging Unit of the
Institute of Psychiatry, London, using a 1.5 T GE Signa System (General
Electric, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA). All anatomical and functional images
were acquired in the same session. During the 6 min fMRI, 208 event-related
functional images with a repetition time (TR) of 1.8 s were acquired using a
T2* weighted gradient echo, echo planar imaging sequence, sensitive to blood
oxygen level dependent (BOLD) contrast (TR=1.8 ms, echo time TE=40 ms, flip
angle 90°, matrix: 64 x 64, field of view FOV=240 mm, 12 slices,
slice thickness 7 mm (0.7 mm gap), 3.15 mm in-plane resolution). To allow
equilibrium to reach steady state, four echo planar imaging volumes
corresponding to 8 s were introduced before each sequence and discarded from
analysis. In the same scanning session, structural volumetric images (using
axial spoiled gradient recall acquisition in steady state) were acquired with
full head coverage, 124 contiguous slices (1.5 mm thick with 0.89 x 0.89
mm in-plane resolution), a 256 x 256 x 124 matrix and a TR/TE time
ratio of 24/5 ms (flip angle 45°, FOV=24 cm) and a quadrature (birdcage)
head coil for radiofrequency transmission and reception. Consistent image
quality was ensured by a semi-automated quality control procedure.
During event-related fMRI acquisition, visual images of the experimental paradigm continuous performance test (CPT) were projected into the bore of the magnet using an active matrix video projector (model LC-XIP1999 EGA-mode, 70 Hz refresh rate, Eiki, Japan) and presented on a screen viewed via an integrated periscope assembly. For response, the right button on a button box connected to an Intel 3 PC running Visual-Basic software for stimulus presentation was used by the participants. All responses were recorded in real time.
A rapid, mixed-trial, randomised presentation design was used. Inter-trial intervals were randomly jittered between 800 ms and 1000 ms, and the appearance of target events was randomised to optimise statistical efficacy. It has been shown that both jittering of the inter-trial intervals and randomisation of stimulus type reduces the response overlap distortions and therefore improves the efficiency of fast event-related fMRI designs.14,15
Experimental paradigm
The computerised fMRI-compatible CPT with monetary incentive, taken from
the Maudsley Attention and Response Suppression task battery was
used.16 All
participants received standardised instructions for the task.
The CPT task consisted of a letter stream of 418 stimuli, each of 300 ms presentation time, with a gap of 400 ms (total intra-trial interval time 900 ms). The letter stream included presentation of eaach of the target stimuli (the letters O and X) 24 times. One of these target letters (X or O) would be linked to monetary reward. Participants were told before the experiment whether the letter X or O was linked to the reward (this was varied randomly). Money could be earned by pressing the right button on a button box as response to the target stimuli. Two rising score bars – one yellow, the other blue – were displayed on the right-hand side of the screen. The amount of money earned during the task would be continuously shown by the yellow bar. The blue bar would rise when the other target letter was correctly identified, but this would not receive monetary reward as a feedback (see online Fig. DS1). The participants were asked to respond always to both target stimuli (X and O). The monetary reward was about 30 p for each correct response. For 100% correct responses £8 could be earned (at the time £1 was equivalent to $1.85). All participants were shown the amount of £8 (in £1 coins) prior to scanning. The target stimuli X and O were interspersed with at least six non-target stimuli randomly selected from the letters A–N. At least 5.4 s and at the most 9 s separated the target stimuli. Reaction time to target stimuli was recorded via a computerised response file linked to the response keypad. For each individual mean reaction time, omission errors to target stimuli, and commission errors (responses to non-target stimuli) were recorded. Each person received the total of £8 after completion of the task, regardless of their performance.
Imaging analysis
All event-related fMRI data were processed using SPM2 (Wellcome Department
of Imaging Neuroscience, London,
http://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/spm)
modified for event-related designs. The functional scans were corrected for
participants head motion by realignment and co-registration using a
rigid body transformation and sinc-interpolation (mean intra-participant head
motion was below 3 mm translation and 2° rotation). They were then
normalised using the same transformation matrix as the anatomical images, and
smoothed with a 10 mm full-width half-maximum Gaussian-kernel. Statistical
parametric maps were calculated for all data using a general linear model,
with separate haemodynamic response functions, modelling the events of the
functional task (estimated model: target events contrasted with non-target
events, adjusted for target stimuli position in paradigm). The estimated
model, a within-participant design implemented in the general linear model,
resulted in an SPM(f) map per person. The significantly activated brain
regions were obtained for each person, reflecting brain activation during
response to the monetary reward-related target stimuli (e.g. X v. O)
by using a linear contrast of regression coefficient at an individual (within
participant) level. To test for regionally specific task effects, group
activation maps (for the group of individuals with autistic-spectrum disorder
and the control group, separately) were created using a threshold of
P<0.001, uncorrected, SPM(t).
To test for group differences per task, group by task interactions were calculated, using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) against the null hypothesis of zero event-related activation differences between the two groups. SPM2 contrasts between –1 and 1 were calculated to estimate voxel values per group/task. The set of voxel values for each group comparison was thresholded and corrected for multiple comparisons at P<0.05 and using family-wise error correction. Furthermore, only those voxels were accepted as significant that belonged to a cluster of at least 10 significantly activated neighbouring voxels (minimum cluster size 10 voxels, extended height threshold of P<0.0001, surviving correction for multiple comparisons at P<0.05). Voxels and clusters were localised using the Montreal Neurological Institute coordinates and transformed into Talairach and Tournoux coordinates:18 where possible, Brodmann areas were classified.19,20
Signal intensity values of anterior cingulate cortex cluster (voxels (n=92)) surviving the correction of multiple comparisons (P<0.05, corrected) of the group by task interactions were extracted from Matlab (Matlab, The MathWorks, Inc., Natick, Massachusetts, USA) and transferred into SPSS (SPSS 11.1 for Windows, SPSS, Inc., Chicago, Illinois, USA). Using nonparametric statistics (Spearmans rho), significantly different voxel values and ADI scores were correlated.
Structural MRI analysis
Optimised voxel-based morphometry analysis
We used optimised voxel-based morphometry implemented in SPM to identify
regional differences in white and grey matter concentration (density) of
individuals with autistic-spectrum disorder compared with control individuals.
Optimised voxel-based morphometry techniques, including template creation,
spatial normalisation, tissue segmentation and
smoothing,21 were
employed. For statistical comparison, grey and white matter segments were
smoothed with a 10 mm full-width half-maximum isotropic Gaussian kernel.
Regional grey and white matter differences between participants with
autistic-spectrum disorder and controls were assessed using
t-statistics. Student t-tests were carried out,
investigating group differences on a voxel-by-voxel basis for grey and white
matter segments of individuals with autistic-spectrum disorder compared with
control individuals (n=20). T-tests for group comparisons
were thresholded at P<0.05, corrected for multiple comparisons,
with a minimal cluster size (cluster extend threshold at P<0.0001)
of 50 voxels.
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Imaging data
For reward achievement (contrast of successful rewarded–successful
non-rewarded stimuli), control individuals significantly activated
(P<0.001, uncorrected) the right insula and the anterior cingulate
cortex and middle frontal gyrus, bilaterally
(Table 1). Individuals with
autistic-spectrum disorder significantly activated (P<0.001,
uncorrected) the left anterior cingulate cortex and left middle and superior
frontal gyrus and the right superior parietal lobe
(Table 1).
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 1 Functional activation during correct responses to target stimuli |
For reward achievement in a group comparison (contrast of rewarded–non-rewarded stimuli, and individuals with autistic-spectrum disorder compared with control individuals), participants with autism showed significantly increased brain activation in the left anterior cingulate gyrus (Fig. 1). Increased activation was also found in the left middle frontal gyrus.
![]() View larger version (12K): [in a new window] [as a PowerPoint slide] |
Fig. 1 Functional activation differences in individuals with autistic-spectrum
disorder (n 10) compared with control individuals (n 10). Significantly
(P<0.05, corrected for multiple comparisons) increased functional
activation to target stimuli in individuals with autistic-spectrum disorder,
compared with control individuals in the left anterior cingulate gyrus
(Brodmann area 32; Talairach & Tournoux coordinates –6, 32, 26;
z=4.65). Significantly (uncorrected P<0.001) increased functional
activation of the same comparison also in the left middle frontal gyrus
(Brodmann area 10; Talarach & Tournoux coordinates –23, 44,
–10).
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![]() View larger version (10K): [in a new window] [as a PowerPoint slide] |
Fig. 2 Significant (P<0.002) correlation of social interaction with
signal intensity increases in the anterior cingulate gyrus in individuals with
autistic spectrum disorder. a. Significant at P<0.001; two-tailed
(Spearmans =0.879, Pearsons correlation=0.902).
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Reward feedback in the context of cognitive tasks is mediated by frontostriatal and frontolimbic connections and in particular by paralimbic brain regions that lie at the interface between emotion and cognition, such as the anterior cingulate gyrus.22 The anterior cingulate cortex is thought to act as central executer and coordinator for predominantly right-hemispheric neural networks, maintaining arousal and alertness, while receiving input from prefrontal and parietal brain areas via the corpus callosum.23 The anterior cingulate cortex is a brain region strategically placed at the interface between motivation and cognition, and therefore thought to play an important role in higher cognitive functions, such as selective and executive attention and conflict detection, as well as being involved in motivation and arousal.24
During reward achievement, people with autistic-spectrum disorder show increased activation of the rostral part of the anterior cingulate cortex. This area is thought to be important for performance monitoring based on reward-feedback.25,26 Meta-analyses suggest that based on reward feedback, rostral areas of the anterior cingulate cortex are responsible for more cognitive aspects of error detection and risk assessment, while caudal, subgenual regions are mediating emotional functions.24
Using fMRI in healthy adults, Kirsch et al demonstrated that the anterior cingulate cortex facilitates selective attention towards highly motivational stimuli.27 Increased pregenual anterior cingulate cortex activation has been reported for the anticipation of monetary gains, whereas subcallosal anterior cingulate cortex activation was increased during winning compared with losing.26 Clinical studies provide evidence that increased anterior cingulate cortex activation is associated with obsessive–compulsive symptoms and abnormal social behaviour, whereas reduced anterior cingulate cortex activation is correlated with social bluntness, lack of self-initiated behaviour and depression.28
In autistic-spectrum disorder, increased anterior cingulate cortex activation is a novel finding. However, reduced anterior cingulate cortex activation has been observed in tasks of social emotion (theory of mind)29 and spatial working memory.30 Ohnishi et al28 reported a positive correlation between reduced anterior cingulate cortex cerebral blood flow and deficits in theory of mind tasks. In addition, increased anterior cingulate cortex grey matter volume has been reported in people with autistic-spectrum disorder.31 Increased grey matter volume could be an indicator for differences in apoptosis and neuronal overgrowth, possibly influencing cognitive or motivational performance. Furthermore, the anterior cingulate cortex is involved in the intuitive assessment of complex situations (as mediated by Von Economo neurons),32 an ability highly deficient in autistic-spectrum disorder. Murphy et al33 reported that reduced 5-HT2A receptor binding in the anterior cingulate cortex (and posterior cingulate cortex) correlated with the degree of abnormal social behaviour in people with autistic-spectrum disorder. Further, Haznedar et al34,35 reported a significant correlation between reduced glucose metabolism of the anterior and posterior cingulate gyrus, and qualitative social interaction in autistic-spectrum disorder. The authors suggested that abnormalities in the metabolism of the anterior cingulate cortex (and frontotemporal regions) underpin deficits in social interaction (and social learning). Our finding of a positive correlation between increased anterior cingulate cortex activation and abnormalities in social interaction are in line with these previous findings. In addition, our findings of increased functional activation of the anterior cingulate cortex during reward achievement in autistic-spectrum disorder are in line with the evidence for anatomical abnormalities in this brain region. Increased activation of the anterior cingulate cortex when performing a task well may reflect an increased need for feedback-related performance monitoring in autistic-spectrum disorder. Alternative interpretations might also suggest increased arousal or enhanced attention to rewarded stimuli. Since the more cognitive part of the rostral anterior cingulate cortex showed increased activation during reward achievements in our sample of individuals with autistic-spectrum disorder, it might reflect increased effort to achieve a desired outcome by actively choosing a goal-directed behaviour with immediate return.
Another explanation for the increased anterior cingulate cortex activation could be that monetary reward is intrinsically a greater incentive for individuals with autistic-spectrum disorder than for people without autism because, although money can be seen as a social reward, through operant learning it has also been strongly associated with primary reinforcers such as food.36
We did not find that areas which differed functionally in participants with autistic-spectrum disorder were also anatomically abnormal. Nevertheless, a left hemispheric reduction of frontal white matter density in autistic-spectrum disorder could be an indicator for disrupted inter- and intra-hemispheric transfer – possibly demanding increased neuronal recruitment of frontal areas. The left hemispheric functional anterior cingulate cortex abnormalities that we observed and reduced frontal white matter density in our autistic-spectrum disorder group, are in line with emerging evidence for left hemispheric functional and structural abnormalities in the disorder.8,31,37 We also earlier observed functional differences in left prefrontal and paralimbic brain regions in adults with autistic-spectrum disorder during cognitive tasks and corresponding grey matter abnormalities in homologue frontal cortex areas.38
Reward achievement, social interaction and frontal lobe maturation
Our combined findings of increased left anterior cingulate cortex
activation during reward achievement and reduced left frontal white matter
density in individuals with autistic-spectrum disorder compared with control
individuals suggest that left frontal lobe white matter mal-development may
affect reward-related brain activation. Increased anterior cingulate cortex
activation could be a compensatory mechanism for dysfunctional communication
and abnormal frontal white matter connectivity in individuals with
autistic-spectrum
disorder.6 The left
hemisphere normally develops later than the right, and frontostriatal
connections are only established relatively late in
adolescence.39,40
Thus, neurodevelopmental delay in autistic-spectrum disorder may have an
impact on the left hemisphere in particular and consequently explain some of
the developmental abnormalities, including social interaction deficits, found
in the disorder. We demonstrated a link between social interaction deficits
and reward-related left hemispheric brain activation. Reward achievements,
like other cognitive behavioural abnormalities such as socio-emotional
intelligence and theory of
mind,29,41
seem predominantly mediated by frontal left hemispheric structures, and
require more frontal lobe brain activation in individuals with less social
interaction abilities. Neurodevelopmental delay of the left hemisphere in
autism could, therefore, influence brain activation patterns and behavioural
outcome.
Study limitations
Our sample is small and only high-functioning adults with autistic-spectrum
disorder were included. Our findings cannot, therefore, be applied to the
wider spectrum of people with the disorder, for example, children or adults
with typical autism (i.e. those with intellectual disability and
developmental language delay). The relationship between increased brain
function during monetary gain and clinical symptoms, and the biological basis
of this hyper-function, need to be clarified in future studies using larger
sample. Furthermore, reward motivation in its entirety needs to be
investigated further to pinpoint the exact motivational incentives which drive
reward-related behaviour in individuals with and without autistic-spectrum
disorder.
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