نبذة مختصرة : The aim core of this thesis is to investigate different aspects of decision-making and flexibility in healthy and clinical populations. Specifically, we investigated the neural correlates of social decision-making in young healthy individuals, the influence of steroid hormones on cognitive flexibility in early menopausal women and cerebral dysfunctions involved in reward devaluation during decision-making process in individuals suffering of Parkinson disease. First, we studied the neural correlates of iniquity aversion when making a decision for oneself or on behalf of his own group and when facing a single individual or another group. Our results highlight influence of two distinct neural network involved in iniquity aversion during complex social exchange, outlining a neuronal explanation to interindividualintergroup discontinuity effect. Our second study, described the influence of hormone replacement therapy (i.e., HRT) on cognitive flexibility in early menopausal women. Many studies described a deleterious effect of steroid supplementation on executive cognitive functions, if it delayed after the onset of the menopause. However, “windows of opportunity” hypothesis suggests a benefic and neuroprotective effect against psychiatric disorders, if hormonal replacement therapy starts close to the beginning of menopause. Combining pharmacological and neuroimaging approaches, we showed a neuroprotective effect in brain structures involved in cognitive flexibility, in young menopausal women. Finally, our last study highlights the effect of dopaminergic treatment in Parkinsonians patients developing impulsive control disorder (i.e., hypersexuality). Preliminary results showed influence of these two factors on distinct subsystems involved in evaluation of different types of costs (i.e., effort/delay) associated with subsequent rewards. This thesis demonstrates the value of combining pharmacology studies and fMRI in order to better understand to which extent hormonal and dopaminergic treatments affect the brain ...
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