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March 27, 2023 by ktangen

Orbitofrontal

dice

  1. Dorsolateral

Last to myelinate

Sleep deprivation

  1. Orbitofrontal

Like dorsolateral, involved in:

Executive functions

Working memory

Cognitive flexibility

Planning

OFC is considered anatomically synonymous with ventromedial cortex

Named by location: above eye orbits

Characteristics

Least explored

Least understood

Sometimes considered part of limbic system

Vary by person

Considerable individuality

Research Difficulties

OFC is close to sinuses (air filled)

Hard to image (MRI, etc)

Orbitofrontal Functions

Cognitive processing

Decision making

Sensory integration

Affective value of reinforcers

Controls

Social adjustment

Responsibility

Mood

Drive

Extensive connections with other brain regions

Reciprocal connections

Ventral & dorsal visual streams

Auditory-spatial processing

phonetic processing (rostral stream)

auditory-spatial processing (caudal stream)

Phonetic processing

All sense modalities

Visual Processing

both ventral & dorsal streams

integration of spatial and object processing

Connect with hippocampus, cingulate and thalamus

Connect with amygdala (emotional center)

Compares expected with actual

Compare expected reward/punishment with actual reward/punishment

Intuitive judgments

Activated during intuitive coherence judgements

Stimulus-outcome associations

Evaluation of behavior

Encode new expectations about punishment and social reprisal

Conflict resolution

Suppressing negative emotions

Approach-avoidance situations

game of chicken

Damage

Inappropriate displays of anger

Inappropriate responses to anger

Defensive, present self in “angelic light“

Lesions – might feel no regret

Damage causes problems with

decision-making

emotion regulation

reward expectation

ADHD

dysfunction of reward circuitry

controlling motivation

reward

impulsivity

Obsessive-Compulsive

executive functioning

impulse control

Addictions

Dopaminergic activation of reward circuits

Compulsive behavior

Increased motivation take drug

Visual discrimination test

DON’T PRESS BUTTON

OFC damage: gotta press!

Reversal learning

Presented pictures A and B

Learn rewarded for picking A

When rule set, switch

Damage to OFC, stay with A

Disinhibited behavior

Excessive swearing

Hypersexuality

Drug, alcohol & tobacco use

Compulsive gambling

Iowa Gambling Task (Bechara & Damásio)

simulation of decision making

4 virtual decks of cards

goal of game is to earn as much money as possible

choose cards by gut reaction

start with $2000 (monopoly $)

don’t know how many cards in deck (it’s virtual)

deck A and B can win $100 reward but large penalty

deck C and D can win $50 reward but small penalty

Good deck = lose slower

Good deck = win some

After 10 cards

healthy show “stress” reaction

GSR if hover over bad deck

damage to amygdala

never develop GSR

After 40-50 cards

healthy stick to the good decks

OFC damage, stick with bad deck

even though know losing money

Probabilistic Learning

must pass up potential large immediate rewards for small longer-                                                       warning cues feel like excitement & pleasure?

Poor social interaction

Faux pas Test

1st used with autism

series of vignettes about social occasions

someone said but should not have said; awkward occurrence

Asked to:

Identify what awkward

Identify why awkward

Identify how would have felt

Identify factual control fact

OFC dysfunction

Understand the story

Can’t judge social awkward

Acquired brain injury have these symptoms:

disinhibited behavior

poor social interaction

excessive swearing

hypersexuality

compulsive gambling

drug, alcohol & tobacco use

low empathy

Alzheimer’s disease

Neurofibrer tangles in orbitofrontal area

Endoplasmic reticulum collapse

Tau protein

Tangles in cell bodies

Neuro-plaque

Brain proteins fold abnormally

Amyloid proteins clump together

Cause plaque between neurons

Causes cell loss

Progressive disease

Symptoms get worse with time

Symptoms

Inappropriate emotional R

Decline in intellect

Confused thinking

Memory loss

Repeated questioning

inappropriate emotional R

Violence

Procedural memory last longer than declarative

Can acquire new skills but not remember learning them

Age related

Likelihood increases with age

Strikes 50% of those over 85

Genetic components

Person with Down’s syndrome (3 copies of chromosome 21)

Always acquire Alzheimer’s in middle age

Early onset: chromosome 1 & 14

Late onset: chromosome 10 & 19

Environmental component

50% no relatives with disease

Yoruba people of Nigeria

high-risk genes

low incidence

Maybe due to diet?

low-calorie, low fat, low salt diet

Treatment to improve memory

Increase glucose & insulin

Acetylcholine activator drugs

Diet rich in antioxidants?

Block Aß42 production, inoculate with small amounts of Aß42

Addiction

involved in development of addictive behavior

dopaminergic activation

reward circuits

addicts show deficits in orbitofrontal, striatal, and thalamic regions

cocaine withdrawal shows increased OFC activity, proportional to drug craving

 

 

Filed Under: BioPsych

‘There are two great principles of psychology: people have a tremendous capacity to change, and we usually don’t.”   Ken Tangen

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