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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 1, 2000, 20(7):2649-2656
Impaired Preference Conditioning after Anterior Temporal Lobe
Resection in Humans
Ingrid S.
Johnsrude1,
Adrian M.
Owen1,
Norman M.
White2,
W. Vivienne
Zhao2, and
Veronique
Bohbot3
1 Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences
Unit, Cambridge, CB2 2EF United Kingdom, 2 Department
of Psychology, and 3 Brain Imaging Centre, Montreal
Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 2T5,
Canada
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ABSTRACT |
Research with animals suggests that structures within the
amygdaloid nuclear complex (ANC) are critical for acquiring
associations between rewarding events and neutral stimuli, a form of
conditioning often manifested in a subsequent preference for those
(conditioned) stimuli. In this study, we investigated the relationship
between the ANC and preference learning in humans. Three abstract
monochrome patterns were presented to each subject over 180 trials in
the context of a counting task requiring working memory. One pattern was paired with food reward on 90% of the trials in which it was presented and with no food reward on the other 10% of trials. The
other patterns were similarly reinforced, but at ratios of 50:50% and
10:90% with reward and nonreward, respectively. Subsequently, a group
of 21 normal participants preferred the pattern paired most often with
reward to that paired least often with reward, and they did not
explicitly relate their preferences to the conditioning procedure, but
instead attributed them to the characteristics of the patterns
themselves. Unlike the normal controls, a group of patients with
unilateral surgical lesions that included the ANC (15 left, 18 right)
did not show conditioned preferences, but performed normally on a
measure of working memory. In contrast, 13 patients with unilateral
damage confined to frontal cortex exhibited normal conditioned
preferences but were impaired on the working memory task. This double
dissociation provides clear evidence that, in humans as in other
animals, reward-related learning (conditioned reward) critically
depends on a circuit involving inferotemporal cortex and the ANC.
Key words:
amygdaloid body; conditioning; emotion; frontal lobe; reward; temporal lobe; working memory
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INTRODUCTION |
An extensive body of research on
animals has linked structures within the amygdaloid nuclear complex
(ANC) to emotional associative learning. Much of this work has focussed
on aversive phenomena such as fear conditioning (Gallagher and Chiba,
1996 ; Killcross et al., 1997 ; Rogan et al., 1997 ; Walker and Davis,
1997 ; Davis, 1998 ; LeDoux, 1998 ; Fanselow and LeDoux, 1999 ; Fendt and
Fanselow, 1999 ). Studies of fear and aversive conditioning in humans
have produced results consistent with the animal literature: patients with bilateral (Bechara et al., 1995 ) and even unilateral (LaBar et
al., 1995 ) ANC lesions do not show normal fear conditioning responses.
Functional neuroimaging studies also suggest a role for the ANC in fear
conditioning in humans (Büchel et al., 1998 ; LaBar et al., 1998 ;
Morris et al., 1998 ).
It has long been recognized in the animal literature that selective
amygdala lesions can affect the ability of animals to associate stimuli
with reward value (Weiskrantz, 1956 ; Jones and Mishkin, 1972 ; Speigler
and Mishkin, 1981 ; Gaffan and Harrison, 1987 ; Cador et al., 1989 ;
Robbins et al., 1989 ; Gallagher et al., 1990 ; Everitt et al., 1991 ;
Hiroi and White, 1991 ; White and McDonald, 1993 ) (for review, see
Aggleton, 1993 ; McDonald and White, 1993 ; Gallagher and Holland, 1994 ;
Ono et al., 1995 ; Hatfield et al., 1996 ; Gallagher and Chiba, 1996 ;
Robbins and Everitt, 1996 ; Hitchcott et al., 1997 ; Hitchcott and
Phillips, 1998 ; Everitt et al., 1999 ; Holland and Gallagher, 1999 ).
Place-preference conditioning is one of the most common procedures for
assessing conditioned reward associations (Carr et al., 1989 ; Schechter
and Calcagnetti, 1993 ; Tzschentke, 1998 ). In this paradigm, a
particular set of environmental cues is first paired with reward, and
then an animal's tendency to approach and spend time in that
environment, compared to a neutral one, is assessed. Place-preference
conditioning procedures can be considered a special case of a more
general conditioning paradigm (stimulus-reward association learning)
in which biologically relevant stimuli (which normally elicit approach
responses due to their rewarding affective significance) become
associated with neutral stimuli that subsequently elicit approach on
their own.
Conditioned preferences have been demonstrated previously in healthy
human participants (Razran, 1954 ; Staats and Staats 1957 , 1958 ; Levey
and Martin, 1975 , 1983 ; Martin and Levey, 1978 ; Kirk-Smith et al.,
1983 ; Bierley et al., 1985 ; Rozin and Zellner, 1985 ; Stuart et al.,
1987 , 1991 ; Allen and Janiszewski, 1989 ; Niedenthal, 1990 ; Baeyens et al., 1993 , 1995 ; Todrank et al., 1995 ), but the underlying anatomical substrates have not been examined in any detail. A few
studies have investigated mechanisms of preference formation in
brain-damaged populations, but these have focussed on the effects of
exposure alone, rather than evaluating the effects of associative learning (Redington et al., 1984 ; Johnson et al., 1985 ).
In a recent study (Johnsrude et al., 1999 ), conditioned preferences for
novel, abstract, monochrome patterns were induced in young, normal
volunteer participants using a method based on cue, or place,
preference procedures originally developed for use with rats (Carr et
al., 1989 ). Care was taken to minimize the subjects' awareness of the
experimental contingencies and of the goal of the study by presenting
the abstract patterns in the context of a cognitively demanding working
memory task. Participants subsequently preferred the pattern paired
most often with reward to that paired least often with reward.
Importantly, participants did not attribute their preferences to the
conditioning procedure, but instead attributed them to the physical
characteristics of the patterns themselves, indicating that they were
largely unaware of the effects of the conditioning procedure on their
subsequent behavior.
In the present study, we used this procedure to assess preference
conditioning in a group of neurosurgical patients with known damage to
the amygdaloid region. In the majority of these patients, surgery was
used to control pharmacologically intractable epilepsy. The resection
always included the ANC and immediately surrounding tissue, as well as
a variable amount of hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus, and lateral
neocortex in one hemisphere. The documented neuropsychological deficits
after unilateral lesions of this type depend on the extent of the
removal, but are generally mild and do not preclude the patient having
a normal and productive life (Hermann et al., 1991 ; Eliashiv et al.,
1997 ). We tested a matched group of normal volunteers and a group of
patients with surgical lesions confined unilaterally to frontal cortex
to evaluate the anatomical specificity of any resulting deficit.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Participants. Thirty-three patients with unilateral
anterior temporal lobe resections (15 left; 18 right) who had
undergone surgery at the Montreal Neurological Institute for the relief of intractable epilepsy or for the removal of benign tumors were included in this study. In all of these patients, the lesion included the ANC and periamygdalar cortices, as described below. The study was
approved by the Research and Ethics Committee of the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, and all participants gave written
consent. Patients with brain damage outside of the operated zone were
excluded, and so were those who exhibited no improvement in their
seizure frequency or intensity after surgery. All patients were either
right-handed, or were left-hemisphere dominant for speech as determined
by a preoperative sodium amobarbital test (Milner, 1997 ), and had
full-scale intelligence quotient (IQ) ratings over 80 on the Wechsler
Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised (WAIS-R).
Table 1 presents demographic information
on participants in the four groups. The 15 patients with left ANC
removals (LA) included one case of cortical dysplasia and one low-grade
ganglioglioma. The pathology in the rest of the patients in this group
was focal gliosis and sclerosis. Three of these patients were tested
3-4 months after surgery, two were tested 5 months to a year after surgery, three were tested between 1 and 5 years after surgery, and the
rest were tested >10 years after surgery. Two of the 18 patients with
removals of the right ANC (RA) were operated for neuroepithelial
tumors, and one for a low-grade oligodendroglioma. The pathology in the
rest of the group was gliosis and sclerosis. Seven of these patients
were tested 3-4 months after surgery, two were tested 5 months to a
year after surgery, two were tested between 1 and 5 years after
surgery, another two were tested between 5 and 10 years after surgery,
and the rest were tested more than 10 years after surgery. A group of
13 surgical patients with lesions confined unilaterally to frontal
cortex (FNTL; seven patients with left-sided removals, six patients
with right-sided removals) were also tested. Pathology reports cited
low-grade gliomas in five cases (two left, three right) a cavernous
hemangioma in one left-sided case, an aneurysm and hematoma in another
left-sided patient, an arteriovenous malformation (AVM) in a
right-sided patient, and cortical dysplasia, gliosis, and/or sclerosis
in the other five patients. The resection did not encroach on temporal lobe structures in any of these patients. Two of these patients were
tested 3-4 months postoperatively, five were tested 5 months to a year
after surgery, three were tested between 1 and 5 years after surgery,
two others were tested 5-10 years after surgery, and one was tested
more than 10 years after surgery. Twenty-one neurologically normal
volunteers (NC) who were matched to the patients with respect to age
and years of education were also tested. One-way ANOVAs demonstrated no
difference in age or years of education among the four groups.
Nonparametric (Kruskal-Wallis) ANOVAs did not reveal any significant
differences in the distributions of handedness, sex, or testing
language (English or French) across the four groups.
Imaging in patients with temporal lobe resections. For
conclusions about functional specialization within the medial temporal lobe to be drawn, it was important to confirm the site and extent of
the resections in the patients with temporal lobe resections, and
quantify the degree of overlap. The resections were labeled on
postoperative T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images, acquired on
each subject (Philips Gyroscan; 1.5 T). These images were linearly transformed into standardized stereotaxic space (Talairach and Tournoux, 1988 ), using DISPLAY, an interactive three-dimensional imaging software package (MacDonald et al., 1994 ; McConnell Brain Imaging Center, Montreal Neurological Institute). Postoperative MR
images were not available for two patients in the LA group. The
surgical reports for these two patients describe left anterior temporal
lobe resections that include the amygdala and uncus, the pes of the
hippocampus in one case, 3 cm of hippocampus in the other, and lateral
neocortical resections in both extending to ~4.5 cm along the Sylvian
fissure and along the base of the temporal lobe, measured from the
temporal pole. A postoperative MR image was not available for one
patient in the RA group. The surgical report for this patient describes
a right anterior temporal lobe resection including the amygdala and
uncus, 3 cm of the hippocampus, and a lateral neocortical resection
extending to 4 cm along the Sylvian fissure and 6 cm along the base of
the temporal lobe. The label volumes resulting from analysis of the 13 postoperative MRs in the LA group and the 17 MRs in the RA group were
coregistered and averaged to produce probability volumes of lesion
location, as shown in Figure 1. The area
of maximal overlap in resection site (100%, resected in all patients)
in each group is centered on the ANC (Talairach coordinates: LA, 24,
15, 18; RA, 24, 15, 19)

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Figure 1.
Overlap of lesions in patients with left (LA) or
right (RA) anterior temporal lobe resection, as indexed by the color
scale, superimposed on the averaged MR image for each group.
A, n = 13 LA patients.
B, n = 17 RA patients. In both LA
and RA groups, the area of maximal overlap in lesion location includes
the region of the amygdala.
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Materials and procedure. A computerized touch-screen task
based on place-preference procedures used with rats was used. This task
has been described in detail elsewhere (Johnsrude et al., 1999 ).
Participants chose between raisins and fruit-flavored candy pellets
(Dweebs; The Willy Wonka Candy Factory, Nestle, York, UK) before the
start of the procedure, and they were always rewarded with that type of
food. Raisins were chosen by 16 of 21 participants in the NC
group, 12 of 15 patients in the LA group, 16 of 18 in the RA group, and
8 of 13 in the FNTL group. The rest chose candy pellets. These
proportions are not significantly different across groups, as tested
using 2 tests.
There were three phases to the experimental procedure: formation of
conditioned preferences, a test of preference expression, and an
assessment of preference attribution. These are shown schematically in
Fig. 2.

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Figure 2.
The three phases of the experimental procedure.
A, Schematic drawing of a block of trials in the
formation phase. On the first trial, the subject picked the top box and
heard a buzzer at the same time as the pattern and black ball appeared.
On the second trial, the subject selected the rightmost box and heard a
melodic flourish at the same time as the pattern and the red ball
appeared. After seeing the red ball, they took the chosen food reward
(one candy or raisin) from the bowl beside the monitor. At the end of
each block of trials the subject was asked to remember how many times
they had found the red ball in each of the three boxes.
B, Expression test. The subject saw successive pairs of
patterns and was told to "touch the pattern you prefer." The
six patterns used in this phase included the three used in the
formation phase and three novel ones. C, In the final
phase, the subject was shown the six patterns used in the preference
expression test together with a number representing the number of times
that pattern had been chosen (of 10). For the three patterns most
frequently chosen, the subject was asked, "Why did you like this
pattern?" to assess whether participants attributed their preferences
to their experience during the formation phase.
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At the beginning of the formation phase, participants were presented
with three black squares on the screen and were given the following
instructions:
"You see three boxes on the screen. At any time, one of the boxes is
hiding a red ball, and the other two are hiding black balls. What you
have to do is guess where the red ball is. I would like you to find as
many red balls as you can. You can choose a box by lightly touching the
screen. Once you have touched a box, it will open up and show you which
ball was hidden underneath. Every so often, you will be asked how many
times you have found the red ball in a particular box. Thus, while you
are choosing boxes you have also to try and remember how many times you
have found a red ball in each of the three boxes. I would like you to
eat one candy/raisin every time you find a red ball."
The participants then proceeded to guess where the red "ball" was
hidden by touching one of the three black "boxes." After each
guess, the selected box would "open" revealing one of three abstract black-and-white line drawings or patterns, and either a red or
a black circle (or ball) superimposed on the center of that
pattern (Fig. 2A) If the circle was red, the
participants heard a melodic flourish and picked the chosen type of
food reward (one candy or one raisin) from a bowl placed beside the
computer screen. If the circle was black, they heard a buzzer and were not permitted to take a food reward. After 3 sec, the selected box
returned to black, and the subject was required to make the next guess.
This interval ensured that participants had sufficient time to taste
the food in the presence of the stimulus patterns on the rewarded
trials. Unknown to the subjects, the stimulus pattern and circle color
were predetermined for each trial, regardless of the location chosen.
A total of 180 trials were presented over six blocks. In total, each of
the stimulus patterns was presented 60 times, together with either a
red ball or a black ball according to the contingency relationship for
that pattern (see below). At the end of each block, the participants
were asked how many times they had found the red circle in each of the
three boxes during the previous block of trials; this was the working
memory task.
Three versions of the formation procedure were prepared. Each subject
was tested using one of the three different versions, chosen
pseudorandomly, in such a way that the distribution of the versions
across the sexes and across the reward types (candy or raisins) was
approximately equal. In each version, a different set of
pattern-outcome contingency pairings was used. Thus, in one version,
pattern A was accompanied by reward (red circle, melodic flourish, and
food reward) on 90% of trials in which it appeared (i.e., 54 trials)
and by nonreward (black circle, buzzer sound and no food) on 10% of
those trials (i.e., six trials). Pattern B was accompanied by reward on
50% of trials in which it appeared and by nonreward on the other 50%.
Pattern C was accompanied by reward on 10% of trials and by nonreward
on the other 90%. In the second version of the task the ratios were:
Pattern A, 10:90; Pattern B, 90:10; Pattern C, 50:50, whereas in the
third version, the corresponding ratios were: 50:50; 10:90, and
90:10.
The trial order was pseudorandom and fixed. The rarest combinations
were always presented just before or just after the more frequent
combinations (e.g., for the first version described above, Pattern A
paired with a black circle was presented just after Pattern A paired
with a red circle). In addition, an identical pattern/outcome pair
could not occur more than twice in a row. These provisions served to
break up runs of similar trials that might otherwise have alerted the
participants to the different outcome contingencies. In addition, each
block of trials contained an equal number of red and black circles, and
at least one occurrence of each of the six possible combinations of
circles and patterns.
Immediately after the conditioning procedure, preferences were
assessed. Six different patterns were used in this part of the study:
three of the patterns were those used in the conditioning procedure,
whereas three others were novel. On each trial, a pair of patterns was
presented, one on each side of the screen, as shown in Figure
2B. The participants were told to choose the pattern they preferred, by touching it. They were told not to think too hard
about it, but to go with their first impression. There were a total of
30 trials, and each pattern was presented 10 times: five times on the
left, and five times on the right, twice with each of the other five patterns.
After the preference assessment all six patterns were presented
simultaneously on the screen for the preference attribution test. A
number on top of each pattern indicated the number of times (out of 10)
the subject had chosen each one (Fig. 2C). To assess the
participants' perceptions of their preferences, they were asked,
"Why did you like this pattern?" for their three most frequently
chosen patterns. At the end of this phase, each participant was
informed of the nature of the study.
Data scoring. The dependent variables analyzed included the
preference scores for each pattern (the number of times, out of a
possible ten, that it was chosen in the preference assessment phase),
and counting error in the working memory component of the formation
procedure. This variable was calculated by computing, for each of the
boxes (left, top, and right) in each block of trials, the absolute
discrepancy between the observed number of red balls (how may the
subject actually saw) and the estimated number (how many the subject
reported). These discrepancy values were summed across boxes and across
blocks of trials to determine the overall discrepancy score. The
discrepancy values were also categorized as underestimations or
overestimations, and the values were summed separately to determine the
total amount of each type of error for each subject. One LA subject had
a total discrepancy score >3 SDs away from the mean for this group:
his data were not included in the analysis.
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RESULTS |
It was decided, a priori, to exclude from the analysis data from
those participants who demonstrated any spontaneous knowledge of the
relationship between their experience with the patterns and their
preferences. In fact, none of the participants related their
preferences to the previous stage of the task during the preference
attribution test or debriefing. Instead, they attributed their
preferences to the physical characteristics of the patterns themselves.
Sample responses (from normal participants and patients with frontal
lobe damage) to the question, "Why did you like this pattern?"
included "looks like the sun", "reminds me of pizza", "has
more of a design, is a little more complicated", "is
symmetrical", "I liked the lines and curves", and "was an
interesting sort of pattern, and caught my eye."
When the preference scores for the 90 and 10% patterns were compared
across groups using a two-way ANOVA, a significant group-by-pattern interaction was obtained, (F(3,63) = 4.09; p < 0.01). Planned comparisons between the two
preference scores in each group demonstrated that participants in the
NC and FNTL groups preferred the 90% pattern to the 10% pattern (NC:
t(20) = 4.0, p < 0.0005; FNTL: t(12) = 1.92, p < 0.05, one-tailed), whereas LA and RA participants did not (Fig. 3A). The LA
group tended to prefer the 10% pattern to the 90% pattern, but not to
a significant degree, t(14) = 1.35, p = 0.1.

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Figure 3.
A, The mean preference scores
(maximum = 10) and SEs for the 90 and 10% patterns in patients
with left or right temporal lobe damage, including the amygdaloid body
(LA, RA), normal control participants
(NC), and patients with unilateral frontal lobe lesions
(FNTL). Error bars indicate SEM. LA and RA participants fail
to show a preference effect; see Results. B, Mean
discrepancy scores on the working memory task in normal control
participants (NC) and in patients with left (LA)
or right (RA) anterior temporal lobe resection and frontal
lobe resections (FNTL). The patients with frontal lobe
lesions are impaired relative to all other groups. Error bars indicate
SEM for the overall discrepancy scores. When the errors are
categorized as overestimations or underestimations, the FNTL group is
shown to produce significantly more underestimations relative to the
other three groups; see Results.
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Preference scores for the 50% pattern and for the novel patterns were
intermediate between those for the 10 and the 90% patterns (range of
mean preference scores on 50% pattern, 3.9-5.7; novel patterns,
4.9-5.4). These patterns were included for reasons of experimental
design, and we did not expect or observe any differences among the
groups in preference scores for these patterns (as tested using one-way
ANOVAs). Furthermore, the value 5, which is the value expected if
participants were choosing at random during the preference assessment
phase, was within 1 SD of the cell mean preference scores for these patterns.
One-way ANOVA on the overall discrepancy scores revealed that NC, LA,
and RA participants were equally able to keep track of the number of
times they had found the red ball in each of the three boxes, whereas
patients with frontal lobe damage were significantly impaired
[Tukey's honestly significant difference (HSD) tests: main
effect, F(3,62) = 5.22;
p < 0.005]. When the discrepancy values were
categorized as overestimations and underestimations, it was apparent
that patients with frontal lobe damage significantly underestimated the
number of times they had found the red ball in each location (Tukey's
HSD tests after one-way ANOVA: F(3,62) = 7.92; p < 0.0005). There were no differences among
the groups in overestimation (one-way ANOVA:
F(3,62) = 1.35; p, ns).
This is shown in Figure 3B. Total discrepancy,
overestimation, and underestimation scores for patients with left
frontal (n = 7) and right frontal (n = 6) excisions were then examined separately to look for hemisphere
effects. Mann-Whitney U tests were used to compare these
two subgroups with normal participants and with each other. Both
frontal groups differed significantly from normals on total discrepancy
scores and underestimation scores (p values <0.05),
but not on overestimation scores, consistent with the F
tests. Left frontal and right frontal groups did not differ on any measure.
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DISCUSSION |
In a previous experiment, a task based on place-preference
conditioning procedures was used to induce conditioned reward
associations in normal human volunteers (Johnsrude et al., 1999 ). The
same task was used in the present study to investigate whether the ANC
might be critically involved in conditioned reward learning in humans,
as it is in other animals. Compared to normal control subjects and
patients with unilateral frontal cortex excisions, patients with
unilateral anterior temporal lobe resections that included the
amygdaloid complex showed severely impaired preference conditioning. In
contrast, patients with anterior temporal lobe resections performed
normally on the counting task, whereas patients with frontal cortex
damage were severely impaired. This task, which required that subjects
monitor the frequency of occurrence of red balls in each of the three
boxes, places significant demands on aspects of working memory that are
known to depend on the integrity of the prefrontal cortex
rather than the medial temporal lobe structures (Petrides and Milner,
1982 ; Smith and Milner, 1988 ; Owen et al., 1990 , 1996 ; Jonides et al.,
1993 ; Smith, 1996 ; Owen, 1997 ). This double dissociation provides clear
evidence that, in humans as in other animals, reward-related learning
(conditioned reward) critically depends on a circuit involving
inferotemporal cortex and the ANC.
Several features of the experimental design were included to minimize
the participants' awareness of the conditioning procedure and the
goals of the experiment. The subjects' attention was not explicitly
drawn to the stimuli to be conditioned before or during conditioning,
and these stimuli were irrelevant to performance of the counting task.
Furthermore, the counting task was made quite demanding to minimize the
subjects' opportunity to attend to anything but that task and the
occurrence of reward or nonreward. The three patterns were paired with
reward on 90, 50, and 10% of the trials in which they occurred. By
avoiding the absolutes of 100 and 0%, and by including a pattern
paired on equal number of trials with reward and nonreward, the
experimental contingencies were made more difficult to discern.
Participants were also asked, at the end of the study, why they showed
the preferences they did, to determine whether preferences would be
attributed to previous experience with the patterns. Without exception,
participants attributed their preferences to the characteristics of the
pattern itself. Because the patterns were randomly assigned to the
different reward contingencies for each subject, these responses may be subjective rationalizations of a conditioned preference. This suggests
that participants were largely unaware of the effect of their previous
experience on their behavior. The patients with temporal lobe removals
also attributed their preferences to the characteristics of the
patterns themselves. They did show preferences, but their preferences
were not consistently related to the frequency with which patterns were
associated with reward in the conditioning procedure. They did not
"learn to like", as the normal subjects and those with frontal lobe
damage did.
All patients in the LA and RA groups had extensive damage to the
amygdaloid region, including the perirhinal and entorhinal cortices, as
well as white matter tracts passing through this area (Fig. 1). Both
groups, particularly the LA group, also had significant damage to
anterior temporal neocortex. Work in monkeys indicates that bilateral
lesions of either the anterior part of inferior temporal cortex or the
ANC (but not the posterior part of inferior temporal cortex or the
hippocampus) produce impairments in object-reward association learning
(Jones and Mishkin, 1972 ; Speigler and Mishkin, 1981 ; Gaffan and
Harrison, 1987 ). The impairments seen in many of these studies may not
be attributable to damage to the ANC per se, but may be caused by
entorhinal and/or perirhinal cortex damage, or to damage to white
matter tracts passing through the amygdalar region that normally
connect rhinal and more lateral temporal cortex with ventral frontal
cortex and medial thalamus (see, for example, Málková et
al., 1997 ). However, considerable evidence from experiments with rats
does implicate the ANC, particularly the lateral and basolateral nuclei
to the exclusion of other surrounding tissue, in conditioned reward
(Peinado-Manzano, 1987 , 1988 ; Cador et al., 1989 ; Everitt et al., 1989 ,
1991 ; Everitt, 1990 ; McDonald and White, 1993 ; White and Hiroi, 1993 ).
The lesions in the patients we tested encompassed the amygdala and
surrounding tissue and so we are unable to draw conclusions about
functional specialization of structures within this region. A notable
difference between the present study and the existing animal literature
is that the amygdala is typically lesioned or inactivated bilaterally
in animal studies of reward-related learning (Coleman-Mesches et al.,
1996 ). The LA and RA participants tested in the present study had
predominantly unilateral damage, although undiagnosed dysfunction in
some structures contralateral to the site of the excised epileptic
focus may have contributed to the impairment (Incisa della Rocchetta et
al., 1995 ). LaBar et al. (1995) found significant impairments in fear conditioning in unilateral temporal lobectomy patients, also with no
effect of side of excision.
The findings presented here of impaired preference conditioning in
patients with even unilateral lesions of the medial temporal area
contrast with those of Tranel and Damasio (1993) , who found evidence
for preserved learning of affective associations in Boswell, a patient
with bilateral medial-temporal damage (including the ANC). In that
study, three previously novel people were instructed to act toward
Boswell in either a positive (e.g., giving compliments and treats),
negative (e.g., requiring him to participate in tedious experiments),
or neutral way, over a 5 d period. Boswell was subsequently unable
to identify the stimulus persons, but when asked to "choose the
person that you would go to for a treat" he consistently chose the
positive stimulus person, suggesting that he was able to learn to
associate faces with reward outcomes. However, Tranel and Damasio (1993) speculate that Boswell's preserved learning might reflect the
action of another learning system, that for reinforced
stimulus-response associations. This type of learning appears to be
mediated by a neural system that includes the dorsal striatum (e.g.,
Mishkin et al., 1985 ; McDonald and White, 1993 ), which is intact in
Boswell. This learning system would also be expected to be intact in
our patients with more restricted lesions. The apparent discrepancy in
the results of the two studies therefore probably reflects the
different requirements of the two tasks.
Because the anterior temporal lobe is considered to be the final stage
in the cortical visual system, our results accord well with the idea
that visual stimuli acquire affective significance through an
interaction between high-level visual areas and the ANC. Temporal lobe
excisions do not generally result in marked visual perceptual
impairments, although patients with right temporal lobe lesions can
show subtle deficits when normal stimulus redundancy has been reduced,
by presenting items tachistoscopically, for example (Milner, 1990 ). The
stimuli used in the present study were not degraded in any way, and all
patients in both temporal lobe groups appeared able to discriminate
them, judging from their physical descriptions of the patterns during
the last phase.
The findings of the present study are also consistent with a body of
literature demonstrating that aspects of working memory may be
dependent on the integrity of the prefrontal cortex (Petrides and
Milner, 1982 ; Funahashi et al., 1989 ; Owen et al., 1990 , 1996 ; Jonides
et al., 1993 ; Petrides et al., 1993 ; Wilson et al., 1993 ; Cohen et al.,
1994 ; Courtney et al., 1996 ; Rao et al., 1997 ) (for review, see Owen,
1997 ; Rushworth and Owen, 1998 ). Thus, unlike the anterior temporal
lobe group, the patients with excisions of the frontal lobe were unable
to maintain an ongoing record of how many red balls had been found in
each location, a requirement that undoubtedly placed demands on aspects
of working memory.
Smith and Milner (1988) and Smith (1996) presented series of words and
abstract designs to normal volunteers and patients with unilateral
frontal or temporal lobe excisions. The words and designs differed in
the number of times that they were repeated within a series. Whereas
normal participants and patients with anterior temporal lobe resections
were equally able to estimate frequency of occurrence, patients with
frontal lobe excisions, particularly the right frontal group,
significantly underestimated the frequency of occurrence of either
words or designs. Furthermore, Smith noticed a trend toward
material-specificity in this deficit: patients with left frontal-lobe
lesions were more impaired than patients with right frontal lobe
lesions at estimating the frequency of occurrence of words, and the
reverse pattern was observed for designs. No effect of side of excision
was seen in the present study: patients with right and left frontal
lobe resections appeared equally impaired. The lack of hemispheric
asymmetry may be owing to the nature of the stimuli to be monitored in
the present study: participants were required to monitor the
conjunction of a particular event (red ball) with three distinct
locations (left, top, or right). This is qualitatively different from
monitoring the occurrence of words or abstract designs that are all
presented in the same spatial position.
In conclusion, the results of this study suggest that working memory
and stimulus-reward association learning are doubly dissociable in
humans. Patients with unilateral frontal lesions were impaired at the
working memory component of the task, but did show preference conditioning. Conversely, patients with anterior temporal lobe resections performed normally on the working memory component, but did
not acquire stimulus-reward associations. To date, the work on
mediation of emotional learning by the ANC in humans has focussed on
negative affect, such as fear (Bechara et al., 1995 ; LaBar et al.,
1995 , 1998 ; Büchel et al., 1998 ; Morris et al., 1998 ; but see,
Hamann et al., 1999 ). The results presented in this paper demonstrate
that, in humans as in other species, structures in the region of the
amygdala are required for cues to acquire affective significance
through their association with rewarding events.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 21, 1999; revised Jan. 12, 2000; accepted Jan. 20, 2000.
This work was supported by the Medical Research Council of Canada
through a Career Investigatorship awarded to B. A. Milner. We
gratefully acknowledge her assistance. I.S.J. was funded by the
Wellcome Trust during the preparation of this manuscript. This work was
conducted in the Neuropsychology/Cognitive Neuroscience Unit, Montreal
Neurological Institute, McGill University, while I.S.J. and A.M.O. were
working there. We thank the participants, the neurosurgeons A. Olivier,
W. Feindel, and R. Leblanc, and numerous colleagues for helpful discussions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Ingrid S. Johnsrude, Medical
Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, 15 Chaucer Road,
Cambridge CB2 2EF, UK. E-mail: ingrid.johnsrude{at}mrc-cbu.cam.ac.uk.
 |
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