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An Electrophysiology Protocol to Measure Reward Anticipation and Processing in Children
Author(s) -
Katherine K. M. Stavropoulos,
Leslie J. Carver
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of visualized experiments
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.596
H-Index - 91
ISSN - 1940-087X
DOI - 10.3791/58348
Subject(s) - neurotypical , autism , anticipation (artificial intelligence) , psychology , protocol (science) , task (project management) , event related potential , brain activity and meditation , cognitive psychology , developmental psychology , neuroscience , electroencephalography , autism spectrum disorder , medicine , computer science , artificial intelligence , alternative medicine , management , pathology , economics
We present a protocol designed to measure the neural correlates of reward in children. The protocol allows researchers to measure both reward anticipation and processing. Its purpose is to create a reward task that is appropriate for young children with and without autism while controlling reward properties between two conditions: social and nonsocial. The current protocol allows for comparisons of brain activity between social and nonsocial reward conditions while keeping the reward itself identical between conditions. Using this protocol, we found evidence that neurotypical children demonstrate enhanced anticipatory brain activity during the social condition. Furthermore, we found that neurotypical children anticipate social reward more robustly than children with autism diagnoses. As the task uses snacks as a reward, it is most appropriate for young children. However, the protocol may be adapted for use with adolescent or adult populations if snacks are replaced by monetary incentives. The protocol is designed to measure electrophysiological events (event-related potentials), but it may be customized for use with eye-tracking or fMRI.

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