1. A habenula-insular circuit encodes the willingness to act
- Author
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Patricia L. Lockwood, Matthew F. S. Rushworth, Luke Priestley, Nima Khalighinejad, and Neil Garrett
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Science ,Decision Making ,Decision ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Context (language use) ,Variation (game tree) ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,Human behaviour ,medicine ,Contextual information ,Animals ,Humans ,030304 developmental biology ,Probability ,Brain network ,Cerebral Cortex ,0303 health sciences ,Anterior insula ,Behavior ,Habenula ,Motivation ,Multidisciplinary ,Supplementary motor area ,Brain ,General Chemistry ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Basal ganglia ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The decision that it is worth doing something rather than nothing is a core yet understudied feature of voluntary behaviour. Here we study “willingness to act”, the probability of making a response given the context. Human volunteers encountered opportunities to make effortful actions in order to receive rewards, while watching a movie inside a 7 T MRI scanner. Reward and other context features determined willingness-to-act. Activity in the habenula tracked trial-by-trial variation in participants’ willingness-to-act. The anterior insula encoded individual environment features that determined this willingness. We identify a multi-layered network in which contextual information is encoded in the anterior insula, converges on the habenula, and is then transmitted to the supplementary motor area, where the decision is made to either act or refrain from acting via the nigrostriatal pathway., A crucial component of voluntary behaviour is deciding that it is worth doing something rather than nothing. Here the authors show the brain network that encodes this decision, which includes the habenula and anterior insula.
- Published
- 2022