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심리학과 특별강연 by Dr. Ken Kishida 안내 (2022.09.08(목), 16:00)

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22-09-06 10:02
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심리학과에서 이번 주 목요일(9/8)에 Ken Kishida 교수님(Wake Forest Univ.)을 초청하여 특별강연을 개최한다고 합니다.

Ken Kishida 교수님께서는 최근 사람 대상으로 voltammetry 기법으로 의사결정 중에 뇌에서 일어나는 신경활동을 sub-second time resolution으로 관찰하고 computational modeling을 이용해서 분석한 논문을 바탕으로 여러 편의 논문을 발표하셨고, 이 연구들을 기반으로 현재 여러 R01과제도 수행 중이시라고 하오니, 구성원들의 많은 관심과 참여바랍니다.
 
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장소: 16동 349호 (국제회의실)
시간: 9/8일(목) 오후 4시-5시
연사: Professor Ken Kishida (Wake Forest University) https://www.kishidalab.com/

Title:
Coordination of extracellular dopamine and serotonin signals in human striatum during conscious decision-making.

Abstract:
How the human brain generates conscious experience is a fundamental problem. In particular, it is unknown how highly variable and dynamic changes in subjective experience are driven by interactions with objective phenomena. We hypothesize a ‘dynamic affective core’ that requires not only dynamic representations of the contents and context of conscious experiences but also their value. The latter, ‘representations of value’, have begun to be well characterized by computational reinforcement learning models and empirical data that support the idea that dopamine neurons signal ‘better (or worse) than expected’ experiences by encoding ‘reward prediction errors’ in changes in their firing rate. However, whether first-person subjective experiences  align with dopaminergic encoding of better or worse than expected ‘reward prediction errors’ has, to our knowledge, not been directly tested. Recently developed technology allows, for the first time ever, high temporal resolution (i.e., sub-second) measurements of the neurotransmitters dopamine and serotonin from deep within the human brain during conscious decision-making and behavior. I will present recent work that supports the hypotheses that dopamine and serotonin encode reward and punishment prediction errors, respectively; that these signals coordinate and drive human behaviors; and, that sub-second fluctuations in dopamine and serotonin levels may drive moment-to-moment changes in the valence of self-reported subjective experiences. Together, our results support the idea that dopamine and serotonin provide valuation update signals in the human brain that guide behavior and may also be critical modulators of subjective phenomenal experience.
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