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State anxiety biases estimates of uncertainty during reward learning in volatile environments

Thomas P Hein, Lilian A Weber, Jan de Fockert, Maria Herrojo Ruiz
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/809749
Thomas P Hein
1Goldsmiths, University of London, Psychology Department, , London, , United Kingdom
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Lilian A Weber
2Translational Neuromodeling Unit (TNU), Institute for Biomedical Engineering, University of Zurich and ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
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Jan de Fockert
1Goldsmiths, University of London, Psychology Department, , London, , United Kingdom
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Maria Herrojo Ruiz
1Goldsmiths, University of London, Psychology Department, , London, , United Kingdom
3Center for Cognition and Decision Making, Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russian Federation
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  • For correspondence: M.Herrojo-Ruiz@gold.ac.uk
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Abstract

Previous research established that clinical anxiety impairs decision making and that high trait anxiety interferes with learning rates. Less understood are the effects of temporary anxious states on learning and decision making in healthy populations. Here we follow proposals that anxious states in healthy individuals elicit a pattern of aberrant behavioural, neural, and physiological responses comparable with those found in anxiety disorders, particularly when processing uncertainty in unstable environments. In our study, both a state anxious and a control group learned probabilistic stimulus-outcome mappings in a volatile task environment while we recorded their electrophysiological (EEG) signals. By using a hierarchical Bayesian model, we assessed the effect of state anxiety on Bayesian belief updating with a focus on uncertainty estimates. State anxiety was associated with an underestimation of environmental and informational uncertainty, and an increase in uncertainty about volatility estimates. Anxious individuals deemed their beliefs about reward contingencies to be more precise and to require less updating, ultimately leading to impaired reward-based learning. We interpret this pattern as evidence that state anxious individuals are less tolerant to informational uncertainty about the contingencies governing their environment and more uncertain about the level of stability of the world itself. Further, we tracked the neural representation of belief update signals in the trial-by-trial EEG amplitudes. In control participants, both lower-level precision-weighted prediction errors (pwPEs) about the reward outcomes and higher-level volatility-pwPEs were represented in the ERP signals with an anterior distribution. A different pattern emerged under state anxiety, where a neural representation of pwPEs was only found for updates about volatility. Expanding previous computational work on trait anxiety, our findings establish that temporary anxious states in healthy individuals impair reward-based learning in volatile environments, primarily through changes in uncertainty estimates and potentially a degradation of the neuronal representation of hierarchically-related pwPEs, considered to play a central role in current Bayesian accounts of perceptual inference and learning.

Footnotes

  • https://osf.io/b4qkp/

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted October 17, 2019.
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State anxiety biases estimates of uncertainty during reward learning in volatile environments
Thomas P Hein, Lilian A Weber, Jan de Fockert, Maria Herrojo Ruiz
bioRxiv 809749; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/809749
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State anxiety biases estimates of uncertainty during reward learning in volatile environments
Thomas P Hein, Lilian A Weber, Jan de Fockert, Maria Herrojo Ruiz
bioRxiv 809749; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/809749

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