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Unlabelled: Rodent models of anxiety have implicated the ventral hippocampus in approach-avoidance conflict processing. Few studies have, however, examined whether the human hippocampus plays a similar role. We developed a novel decision-making paradigm to examine neural activity when participants made approach/avoidance decisions under conditions of high or absent approach-avoidance conflict. Critically, our task required participants to learn the associated reward/punishment values of previously neutral stimuli and controlled for mnemonic and spatial processing demands, both important issues given approach-avoidance behavior in humans is less tied to predation and foraging compared to rodents. Participants played a points-based game where they first attempted to maximize their score by determining which of a series of previously neutral image pairs should be approached or avoided. During functional magnetic resonance imaging, participants were then presented with novel pairings of these images. These pairings consisted of images of congruent or opposing learned valences, the latter creating conditions of high approach-avoidance conflict. A data-driven partial least squares multivariate analysis revealed two reliable patterns of activity, each revealing differential activity in the anterior hippocampus, the homolog of the rodent ventral hippocampus. The first was associated with greater hippocampal involvement during trials with high as opposed to no approach-avoidance conflict, regardless of approach or avoidance behavior. The second pattern encompassed greater hippocampal activity in a more anterior aspect during approach compared to avoid responses, for conflict and no-conflict conditions. Multivoxel pattern classification analyses yielded converging findings, underlining a role of the anterior hippocampus in approach-avoidance conflict decision making.
Significance Statement: Approach-avoidance conflict has been linked to anxiety and occurs when a stimulus or situation is associated with reward and punishment. Although rodent work has implicated the hippocampus in approach-avoidance conflict processing, there is limited data on whether this role applies to learned, as opposed to innate, incentive values, and whether the human hippocampus plays a similar role. Using functional neuroimaging with a novel decision-making task that controlled for perceptual and mnemonic processing, we found that the human hippocampus was significantly active when approach-avoidance conflict was present for stimuli with learned incentive values. These findings demonstrate a role for the human hippocampus in approach-avoidance decision making that cannot be explained easily by hippocampal-dependent long-term memory or spatial cognition.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1915-15.2015 | DOI Listing |
Behav Brain Res
August 2025
Oral Physiology, Department of Oral Functional Science, Division of Oral Medical Science, Faculty of Dental Medicine and Graduate School of Dental Medicine, Hokkaido University, Japan.
The basolateral amygdala (BLA) plays a critical role in aversive learning and decision‑making, yet its specific contribution to the expression of conditioned taste aversion (CTA) remains incompletely understood. Here, we examined how transient chemogenetic inhibition of the BLA influences licking microstructure and approach-avoidance behavior toward a conditioned saccharin solution. Male C57BL/6 mice received bilateral BLA injections of AAV8‑hSyn‑hM4Di‑mCherry (experimental) or AAV8‑hSyn‑mCherry (control).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci
August 2025
Department of Behavioral and Clinical Neuroscience, Ruhr-University Bochum, Massenbergstraße 9-13, 44787, Bochum, Germany.
Height fear might involve dysfunctional, implicit biases in attention and avoidance in the presence of height-related stimuli. The present study used an Approach-Avoidance Task (AAT) for fear of heights to investigate the association between height fear and alterations in attention and approach-avoidance tendencies. The AAT for height-related stimuli assessed individuals' response times when pulling or pushing height-related vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMem Cognit
August 2025
Department of Psychology, University of Illinois Chicago, 1007 West Harrison Street (M/C 285), Chicago, IL, 60607, USA.
Research shows strong impacts of congruency on memory for social information, but whether memory advantages emerge for congruent or incongruent information is inconsistent. Social targets can have congruency between their facial expression (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImaging Neurosci (Camb)
June 2025
School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada.
Automatic tendencies toward physical activity and sedentary stimuli are involved in the regulation of physical activity behavior. However, the brain regions underlying these automatic tendencies remain largely unknown. Here, we used an approach-avoidance task and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in 42 healthy young adults to investigate whether cortical and subcortical brain regions underpinning reward processing and executive function are associated with these tendencies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
July 2025
Department of Psychology, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United States.
To behave adaptively, people need to integrate information about probabilistic outcomes and balance drives to approach positive outcomes and avoid negative outcomes. However, questions remain about how uncertainty in positive and negative outcomes influence approach-avoid decision-making dynamics. To fill this gap, we developed a novel Probabilistic Approach Avoidance Task (PAAT) and characterized behavior in this task using sequential sampling models.
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