Suggestions(1)
Exact(4)
The motivation of avoiding punishments and receiving rewards reinforces learning behaviors (Seymour et al. 2007).
The present finding of insular activation associated with the motivation of avoiding punishments could reflect the prediction of receiving punishments, which could make us avoid punishments.
Although human functional neuroimaging studies have demonstrated the neural mechanisms related to the effect of the motivation of receiving rewards on episodic memory (Adcock et al. 2006; Shigemune et al. 2010), there is little evidence of the effect of the motivation of avoiding punishment on this memory.
Taken together, these results may indicate that memory enhanced by the motivation of avoiding punishments could be modulated by interactions between the VTA/SN, NA, or insular regions, which are associated with the prediction of punishments, and the hippocampus, which is associated with the processing of memory details.
Similar(55)
Yet the motivation for avoiding this sort of grand theory was not so much that it promoted bad theory, but that it promoted habits of mind, such as "collectivism," "rationalism," or "historicism," that were thought to be conducive to totalitarianism.
Overall, these results differ from Aretz and Bartram (2010) and Arnold et al. (2014), since the former also find evidence for the asymmetric information hypothesis and both reviews identify some support for hedging to be driven by the motivation of firms to avoid agency conflicts of debt.
The motivation of receiving rewards or avoiding punishments enhances learning performance in experimental animals (Rolls 2007).
The motivation of getting rewards or avoiding punishments reinforces learning behaviors.
The association process involved in the hippocampus could be modulated by the motivation of receiving rewards or avoiding punishments, and the processing of contextual information involved in the PHC region could be modulated by the association-related hippocampal activity.
It is solely based on the motivation of the mice to avoid prolonged exposure to an open area under light and to search for a dark and safe hideout, the escape box.
In the present study, we found ventromedial VTA/SN activations associated with the motivation of both receiving rewards and avoiding punishments.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com