Property | Value |
?:abstract
|
-
When choosing between rewards that differ in temporal proximity (inter-temporal choice), human preferences are typically stable, constituting a clinically-relevant transdiagnostic trait. Here we show in patients undergoing deep brain stimulation (DBS) to the anterior limb of the internal capsule / nucleus accumbens for treatment-resistant obsessive-compulsive disorder, that chronic (but not acute) DBS disrupts inter-temporal preferences. Findings support a contribution of the human nucleus accumbens region to preference stability over time.
|
is
?:annotates
of
|
|
?:creator
|
|
?:doi
|
-
10.1101/2020.12.11.417337
|
?:doi
|
|
?:externalLink
|
|
?:journal
|
|
?:license
|
|
?:pdf_json_files
|
-
document_parses/pdf_json/b023108dac7f15f4deb8afdfff4b4b04a71b02f3.json
|
?:publication_isRelatedTo_Disease
|
|
?:sha_id
|
|
?:source
|
|
?:title
|
-
Chronic deep brain stimulation of the human nucleus accumbens region disrupts the stability of inter-temporal preferences
|
?:type
|
|
?:year
|
|