Anxiety-Like Behavioural Inhibition Is Normative under Environmental Threat-Reward Correlations.

Behavioural inhibition is a key anxiety-like behaviour in rodents and humans, distinct from avoidance of danger, and reduced by anxiolytic drugs. In some situations, it is not clear how behavioural inhibition minimises harm or maximises benefit for the agent, and can even appear counterproductive. E...

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Main Author: Dominik R Bach
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-12-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004646
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author Dominik R Bach
author_facet Dominik R Bach
author_sort Dominik R Bach
collection DOAJ
description Behavioural inhibition is a key anxiety-like behaviour in rodents and humans, distinct from avoidance of danger, and reduced by anxiolytic drugs. In some situations, it is not clear how behavioural inhibition minimises harm or maximises benefit for the agent, and can even appear counterproductive. Extant explanations of this phenomenon make use of descriptive models but do not provide a formal assessment of its adaptive value. This hampers a better understanding of the neural computations underlying anxiety behaviour. Here, we analyse a standard rodent anxiety model, the operant conflict test. We harvest Bayesian Decision Theory to show that behavioural inhibition normatively arises as cost-minimising strategy in temporally correlated environments. Importantly, only if behavioural inhibition is aimed at minimising cost, it depends on probability and magnitude of threat. Harnessing a virtual computer game, we test model predictions in four experiments with human participants. Humans exhibit behavioural inhibition with a strong linear dependence on threat probability and magnitude. Strikingly, inhibition occurs before motor execution and depends on the virtual environment, thus likely resulting from a neural optimisation process rather than a pre-programmed mechanism. Individual trait anxiety scores predict behavioural inhibition, underlining the validity of this anxiety model. These findings put anxiety behaviour into the context of cost-minimisation and optimal inference, and may ultimately pave the way towards a mechanistic understanding of the neural computations gone awry in human anxiety disorder.
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spelling doaj-art-449e4d7e17b94b3495cd7e19a4ee6a2a2025-08-20T02:34:06ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582015-12-011112e100464610.1371/journal.pcbi.1004646Anxiety-Like Behavioural Inhibition Is Normative under Environmental Threat-Reward Correlations.Dominik R BachBehavioural inhibition is a key anxiety-like behaviour in rodents and humans, distinct from avoidance of danger, and reduced by anxiolytic drugs. In some situations, it is not clear how behavioural inhibition minimises harm or maximises benefit for the agent, and can even appear counterproductive. Extant explanations of this phenomenon make use of descriptive models but do not provide a formal assessment of its adaptive value. This hampers a better understanding of the neural computations underlying anxiety behaviour. Here, we analyse a standard rodent anxiety model, the operant conflict test. We harvest Bayesian Decision Theory to show that behavioural inhibition normatively arises as cost-minimising strategy in temporally correlated environments. Importantly, only if behavioural inhibition is aimed at minimising cost, it depends on probability and magnitude of threat. Harnessing a virtual computer game, we test model predictions in four experiments with human participants. Humans exhibit behavioural inhibition with a strong linear dependence on threat probability and magnitude. Strikingly, inhibition occurs before motor execution and depends on the virtual environment, thus likely resulting from a neural optimisation process rather than a pre-programmed mechanism. Individual trait anxiety scores predict behavioural inhibition, underlining the validity of this anxiety model. These findings put anxiety behaviour into the context of cost-minimisation and optimal inference, and may ultimately pave the way towards a mechanistic understanding of the neural computations gone awry in human anxiety disorder.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004646
spellingShingle Dominik R Bach
Anxiety-Like Behavioural Inhibition Is Normative under Environmental Threat-Reward Correlations.
PLoS Computational Biology
title Anxiety-Like Behavioural Inhibition Is Normative under Environmental Threat-Reward Correlations.
title_full Anxiety-Like Behavioural Inhibition Is Normative under Environmental Threat-Reward Correlations.
title_fullStr Anxiety-Like Behavioural Inhibition Is Normative under Environmental Threat-Reward Correlations.
title_full_unstemmed Anxiety-Like Behavioural Inhibition Is Normative under Environmental Threat-Reward Correlations.
title_short Anxiety-Like Behavioural Inhibition Is Normative under Environmental Threat-Reward Correlations.
title_sort anxiety like behavioural inhibition is normative under environmental threat reward correlations
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004646
work_keys_str_mv AT dominikrbach anxietylikebehaviouralinhibitionisnormativeunderenvironmentalthreatrewardcorrelations