The Effect of Task Engagement on Reward Processing
Author
Faculty Advisor
Date
2025
Keywords
reward processing, electroencephalography, RewP, doors task
Abstract (summary)
Many aspects of human behaviour are shaped by reward processing, including decision making and motivation. Electroencephalography (EEG) has identified a neural signal called the reward positivity (RewP), which represents the brain’s interpretation of reward outcomes. The aim of this study is to see whether the RewP is affected by task engagement. Participants will complete the ‘doors task’, a decision-making task where selecting one of two doors may result in a monetary reward. In one condition (the standard version), rewards will be equally probable (50/50), while in the other, one door will have an increased likelihood of reward, introducing a detectable pattern. We hypothesize that participants will become more engaged in the patterned condition, and that the RewP will be larger when they recognize and exploit this pattern. This would show that the standard ‘doors task’ used to measure RewP lacks engagement and does not allow for learning, potentially limiting its effectiveness. These findings would have implications for researchers using the RewP as a biomarker for depression, ultimately improving the accuracy and applicability of EEG-based assessments in clinical settings.
Publication Information
DOI
Notes
Presented on April 17, 2025, at Student Research Day held at MacEwan University in Edmonton, Alberta, and at NOWCAM 2025 held at University of Victoria in Victoria, British Columbia from, May 8-10, 2025.
Item Type
Student Presentation
Language
Rights
All Rights Reserved