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Not Just In Challenging Economic Times, Stress Hinders Decision-making Abilities
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A little bit
of stress goes a long way and can have far-reaching effects.
Neuroscientists from the University of Washington (UW) have found that
a single exposure to uncontrollable stress impairs decision making in
rats for several days, making them unable to reliably seek out the
larger of two rewards.
Lauren Jones,
a UW psychology doctoral student, working with Jeansok Kim, a UW
associate professor of psychology, found that stressed rats took
significantly longer to respond to a change in rewards given to them in
a maze and their performances never matched those of other rats not
exposed to stress.
Another group
of rats was given a small dose of the drug muscimol, which temporarily
inactivated the amygdala in their brains, prior to being subjected to
the same stress. These rats were unaffected by the stress and performed
as well as the animals that were not stressed. The amygdala is located
in the forebrain and processes information about such things as fear
(the so-called fight-or-flight response), stress and rewards.
"Stress can
be long lasting, depending on what it is. The rats that received the
drug were tested on the maze the day after they were exposed to stress
and it was as if the experience had never happened to them.
Inactivation of the amygdala took the stress away," said Jones.
"Whatever
stress these rats experienced was not being processed," said Kim. "They
seemed to be immune to the stressful experience."
Stress is
known to contribute to a number of psychopathologies in humans
including anxiety, depression, schizophrenia and drug-use relapse.
Neuroscientists
also know that stress affects cognition, and believe research exploring
how it relates to learning, memory and decision making will help them
understand potential problems stressed people experience in their daily
lives.
The UW
researchers worked with three groups of rats – a control group, a
stress group and a stress plus amygdala inactivation group. All of the
rats were acclimated to an automated figure-eight shaped maze that
consisted of a center track leading to two loops that ran to the left
and right and back to the center. The animals were trained for several
days until they were able to complete 40 laps or trials in less than 30
minutes. For each trial, a rat would start in the center, then was
allowed to freely run to either the right or the left loop, consume a
water reward and return to the center for the next trial. Both loops
always had an 80 percent chance of containing 0.04 milliliters of
water, and the animals made a comparable number of visits to each loop.
The animals were kept on a daily water restriction schedule to motivate
them to run the maze.
After this,
rats in the stress group and those that were given the drug were
restrained and subjected to an unpredictable series of tail shocks for
one hour. The following day, all of the rats were returned to the maze
for a new series of trials. Once again the animals could run either
loopof the maze, but this time the reward amount was increased on one
side to 0.12 milliliters.
Within three
days the control group and stress plus amygdala inactivation group were
reliably able to navigate the maze and collect the larger reward on 35
out of 40 trials. The stress group, meanwhile, was only successful on
about 23 of 40 trials, and after several more days their performance
only increased to about 26 out of 40 trials.
"The stressed
animals took longer to learn and weren't adjusting their behavior in
the maze," said Jones. "From this research we can see the effects of
stress on rats and how one episode of stress impairs their decision
making for several days.
"We know
humans have to make numerous higher-levels decisions, some of which are
complex and require deliberations. Rats are guided by survival, and
seeking out the larger of two rewards for the same effort should be
fundamentally easy. The fact that stress can have such an effect on a
simple but critical task is amazing."
Kim added:
"Decision making, both large and small, is part of our lives. People
are prone to make mistakes under stress. Look at what has been going on
with the stock market. People are under huge amounts of stress and we
have to question some of the decisions that are being made."
For more information on the University of Washington , visit www.washington.edu.
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