1,227 results on '"Reward sensitivity"'
Search Results
2. The role of decision-making and impulsivity in beverage consumption
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Kulbida, Max, Kemps, Eva, Williamson, Paul, and Tiggemann, Marika
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- 2024
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3. Evaluating the effect of an individualised reward-related impulsivity induction on ad libitum alcohol consumption: A pilot study
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Lindsay, Hannah J., Stjepanović, Daniel, and Gullo, Matthew J.
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- 2024
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4. A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Investigation of Hot and Cool Executive Functions in Reward and Competition.
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Lin, Hsin-Yu, Fung, Hoki, Wang, Yifan, Ho, Roger Chun-Man, and Chen, Shen-Hsing Annabel
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Social and environmental influences are important for learning. However, the influence of reward and competition during social learning is less understood. The literature suggests that the ventromedial prefrontal cortex is implicated in hot executive functioning (EF), while the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex is related to cool EF. In addition, reward processing deficits are associated with atypical connectivity between the nucleus accumbens and the dorsofrontal regions. Here, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to determine the role of hot and cool EF in reward processing and their relationship to performance under social competition. We adapted a reward-based n-back task to examine the neural correlates of hot and cool EF and the reward influence on performance during competition. A total of 29 healthy adults showed cortical activation associated with individual differences in EF abilities during fMRI scans. Hot and cool EF activated distinct networks in the right insula, hippocampus, left caudate nucleus, and superior parietal gyrus during the no-competition task, while they differentially activated the right precuneus and caudate nucleus in the competition condition. Further analysis revealed correlations between the Hot–Cool network and reward sensitivity and risk-taking behaviour. The findings provided further insights into the neural basis of hot and cool EF engagement in the socio-emotional regulation for learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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5. Punishment and Reward Sensitivity in Risk-Taking as Potential Mechanisms Explaining the Relationships Between Childhood Callous-Unemotional Traits and Adolescent Substance Use in a Longitudinal Cohort Study Sample.
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Sakki, Hanna, St Clair, Michelle C., Shou, Yiyun, and Allen, Jennifer L.
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PUNISHMENT (Psychology) , *REWARD (Psychology) , *DRUG abuse , *COGNITIVE psychology , *MEDICAL sciences - Abstract
Childhood callous-unemotional (CU) traits are associated with a neurocognitive response style of high reward and low punishment sensitivity, which may make these children particularly vulnerable to substance misuse. However, the mechanisms explaining the link between CU traits and substance use are poorly understood. This study investigated the mediating influences of reward and punishment sensitivity on the association between childhood CU traits and adolescent substance use. Using data from the UK Millennium Cohort Study, mediation analyses were conducted to investigate the potential indirect effects of age 14 reward and punishment sensitivity in risk-taking on the relationships between age 11 CU traits and alcohol, cannabis, and other illicit drug use at age 17. No direct effects of CU traits on substance use were found when accounting for gender, baseline alcohol use, poverty, emotional symptoms, conduct problems, hyperactivity, and verbal ability at age 11. Indirect effects of increased reward sensitivity on the relationship between CU traits and increased use were seen for alcohol, cannabis, and other drugs. There was a significant indirect effect of reduced punishment sensitivity on the relationship between CU traits and increased alcohol use, but not cannabis or other substance use. Findings suggest that reward and punishment sensitivity may have independent effects on decision-making processes contributing to adolescent substance use. Prevention and early intervention for substance use should consider modifying intervention strategies to fit the needs of adolescents with a callous interpersonal style and a neurocognitive profile characterized by a high drive for rewards and low risk aversion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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6. Delving into the role of reward and punishment sensitivity in anorexia nervosa: Punishment responsivity as the only predictor of eating disorder symptom persistence in adolescents.
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Jonker, Nienke C., Glashouwer, Klaske A., and de Jong, Peter J.
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CROSS-sectional method , *RESEARCH funding , *SEX distribution , *AGE distribution , *SEVERITY of illness index , *REWARD (Psychology) , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *TEENAGERS' conduct of life , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PUNISHMENT , *ANOREXIA nervosa , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Objective: This study differentiated between self‐reported punishment responsivity (PR) and motivation to avoid punishment (MP) and examined their relationship with anorexia nervosa (AN) and its course in a combined cross‐sectional and longitudinal approach. We explored whether inconsistent findings regarding reward sensitivity may be explained by previous research not differentiating between reward responsivity (RR) and motivation to approach reward (MR). Method: Participants were 69 adolescents with AN and 69 adolescents without AN matched on age, sex and educational level. Eating disorder (ED) symptom severity, PR, MP, RR, and MR were assessed at the start of treatment and 1 year later. Results: Only PR was higher in patients with AN than in the comparison group. Both PR and MP decreased over the course of 1 year, however, only the reduction in PR was related to the reduction in ED symptoms. Lastly, only higher baseline PR was independently related to less improvement in ED symptoms over the course of 1 year. Conclusion: There was no support for the involvement of RS or its specific dimensions in AN. Most critical, the findings suggest that specifically the PR dimension of punishment sensitivity is related to the persistence of AN and could be an important target for treatment. Key points: Adolescents with AN showed higher punishment responsivity than a comparison group without an eating disorder.Punishment responsivity was also the only factor that was independently related to the course of AN.This points to punishment responsivity as a promising target for treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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7. Toward Diversification of Acute Stressors and Precision Stress Research: A Stage 2 Registered Report Validating a Reward-Salient Stress Task in Emerging Adults.
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Moriarity, Daniel P., Case, Julia, Kautz, Marin M., Ghias, Kubarah, Pennypacker, Kirsta, Angus, Douglas J., Harmon-Jones, Eddie, and Alloy, Lauren B.
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REWARD (Psychology) , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *TRANSITION to adulthood , *YOUNG adults , *MENTAL illness - Abstract
Stress is one of, if not the, most ubiquitously studied risk factor across the health sciences. This is unlikely to change given that the primary drivers of mortality and disability are chronic, stress-mediated illnesses (often highly comorbid with psychopathology). We argue that an important limitation of stress research is the consistency with which the Trier Social Stress Test is used when the research questions are not specific to social stress. We advocate for precision stress research using qualitatively different stressors to facilitate exploration of how different types of stressors might differentially impact health outcomes, including psychopathology. This registered report validates a reward-salient stress task (a modified Anger Incentive Delay Task) in a sample of 101 emerging adults, over half of whom reported clinically relevant anxiety, hypo/mania, depression, and/or suicidal ideation, who participated in a study between 2020 and 2022. This task involves teaching participants a game where they can win money. Part way through, the "goal frustration" condition changes the rules such that correct responses to trials with anticipatory stimuli indicating the possibility to win money actually lose money on 56% of trials despite visual feedback indicating that responses were successful. Results consistently indicated that the Anger Incentive Delay Task successfully reduced positive emotions and motivation and increased negative emotions. The magnitude of these responses was predicted by individual differences in reward and punishment sensitivity. Given the breadth of psychopathologies that share both (a) stress and (b) reward and punishment sensitivity as risk factors, a reward-salient acute stress task is an important tool for precision psychopathology research. General Scientific Summary: High and low reward processing are key risk factors for many mental health problems, as is elevated stress reactivity; however, the vast majority of studies using acute lab-based stressors rely on social stress tasks. To facilitate stress research focused on reward processing, this study validates a modified version of the Anger Incentive Delay Task—demonstrating its ability to induce emotional and motivational changes and that these changes are greater in individuals with elevated reward and punishment sensitivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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8. Using hierarchical drift diffusion models to elucidate computational mechanisms of reduced reward sensitivity in adolescent major depressive disorder.
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Shen, Lei, Hu, Ya-xin, Lv, Qin-yu, Yi, Zheng-hui, Gong, Jing-bo, and Yan, Chao
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MENTAL depression , *REWARD (Psychology) , *DRIFT diffusion models , *DEPRESSION in adolescence , *YOUNG adults - Abstract
Background: Anhedonia—a core symptom of major depressive disorder (MDD)—is closely related to diminished reward sensitivity. Nonetheless, the psychopathological and computational mechanism underlying anhedonia in young patients with MDD remains unclear. Therefore, this study aims to investigate reward sensitivity in adolescents and young adults with MDD using computational modelling. Methods: Overall, 70 patients with MDD and 54 age- and sex-matched healthy controls (HC) completed a probabilistic reward task (PRT) to assess their general behavioral inclination towards more frequently reinforced stimuli (i.e., "response bias"). Bayesian hierarchical drift diffusion modeling (HDDM) was employed to determine changes in reward sensitivity and computational process during decision-making. Results: Adolescents with depression showed a trend toward reduced response bias compared to those in HC. HDDM analysis revealed wider decision thresholds in both adolescents and young adults with MDD group. Adolescents with MDD exhibited significantly lower drift rates and reduced starting point bias compared to those in HC. Higher anhedonia levels were linked to lower drift rates and wider decision thresholds. Additionally, increased discriminability correlated with higher drift rates, while higher response bias was linked to larger starting points. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that reduced reward sensitivity and slower evidence accumulation during reward learning may serve as potential indicators of anhedonia in adolescents with MDD. These findings provided crucial insights into the dysregulated positive affect model, underscoring a dysfunctional reward system as a key factor in anhedonia developmental psychopathology in depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. How to improve reward sensitivity – Predictors of long-term effects of a randomized controlled online intervention trial.
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Potsch, L. and Rief, W.
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REWARD (Psychology) , *COGNITIVE therapy , *EXERCISE therapy , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *MENTAL depression - Abstract
Reward sensitivity is a central maintaining factor of depression. Current treatments fail at sufficiently and reliably modifying reward processing. Therefore, we employed interventions targeting reward sensitivity and evaluated the long-term efficacy of different online interventions, additionally exploring predictors of changes in reward sensitivity. This four-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) tested the long-term stability of treatment effects during a four-month follow-up in 127 participants of a two-week online intervention (behavioral activation vs. mindfulness and gratitude vs. combination of both). In addition, we investigated predictors of treatment success defined as improvement in reward sensitivity. Predictors we investigated were depressive expectations, stress and the type of reward implemented in the exercises of the intervention (physical activities and social encounters). The improvement concerning reward sensitivity, as well as the reduction of anhedonia and depressive symptoms was stable over a four-month follow-up. We did not find evidence for differences between the active intervention groups. Positive changes in depressive expectations were a significant predictor of long-term improvements in reward sensitivity. Only self-report measures were used and the interpretation of the long-term efficacy of the online interventions is limited since the waitlist control condition was not extended to the follow-up. Clinicians should focus on violating depressive expectations to facilitate updating the prediction and anticipation of future rewarding experiences. This could be a vital mechanism of change in reward sensitivity. However, future research still needs to unravel what kind of interventions are most effective in targeting reward insensitivity. • Effects of online interventions on reward sensitivity are stable over time. • Behavioral activation and mindfulness do not differ in long-term efficacy. • Changes in depressive expectations predict improvements in reward sensitivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Identifying cognitive, affective, and developmental mechanisms linking threat and deprivation with adolescent psychopathology.
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Sadikova, Ekaterina, Weissman, David G., Rosen, Maya L., Robinson, Elise, Lengua, Liliana J., Sheridan, Margaret A., Tiemeier, Henning, and McLaughlin, Katie A.
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REWARD (Psychology) , *INTERNALIZING behavior , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *EXTERNALIZING behavior , *THEORY of mind - Abstract
Background Methods Results Conclusions The mechanisms linking early‐life adversity with psychopathology over the life‐course are complex. In this prospective study, we collectively examined cognitive, affective, and developmental mediators previously found to individually link childhood threat and deprivation experiences to adolescent psychopathology to identify the most potent mechanisms.Data came from a community sample of 227 children (mean child age 11.5 ± 0.5 years, 48.5% female) from the Seattle metro area with recruitment designed to reflect diversity in family income. Candidate mechanisms included self‐rated pubertal development and task‐measured attention bias to threat, emotion regulation, theory of mind, fear learning, inhibitory control, language ability, reasoning, and reward sensitivity. Using a high‐dimensional mediation approach, we determined which mediating pathways linking threat and deprivation to psychopathology persisted after controlling for all candidate mechanisms associated with psychopathology. Models additionally controlled for the child's age, sex, early‐childhood emotional and behavioral symptoms, poverty, and maternal depression.Blunted reward sensitivity mediated the prospective relationship between threat and internalizing psychopathology, explaining 17.25% (95% CI 1.08%, 69.96%) of this association. Advanced pubertal development was associated with increases in internalizing and externalizing symptoms (standardized associations of 0.16 (95% CI 0.03, 0.29) and 0.17 (95% CI 0.05, 0.29), respectively), but not with adversity. Although deprivation was strongly related to psychopathology, no mechanisms were empirically identified.In a well‐characterized community sample, we isolated reward sensitivity as a robust mediator of the prospective association between early‐life threat and adolescent internalizing psychopathology. Interventions aimed at bolstering reward sensitivity may mitigate the impact of early‐life threat experiences on internalizing problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. How Culture and Musical Engagement Shape Musical Reward Sensitivity in Danish Teens: A Validation Study of the Danish Barcelona Musical Reward Questionnaire With 4641 Adolescents.
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Lippolis, Mariangela, Derdau Sørensen, Stine, Petersen, Bjørn, Vuust, Peter, and Brattico, Elvira
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REWARD (Psychology) , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *EXPLORATORY factor analysis , *MOOD (Psychology) , *DANES - Abstract
ABSTRACT The ability to convey emotions and induce pleasure is one of the most important aspects of the way that music becomes meaningful to humans. Affective responses to music are specific to both cultural and personal preferences, but little is known about the individual variability in adolescence. The Barcelona Music Reward Questionnaire (BMRQ) is a psychometric measure that identifies five factors associated with musical pleasure: Musical Seeking, Emotional Evocation, Mood Regulation, Social Reward, and Sensory‐Motor. With this study, we aimed to validate the BMRQ in Danish teens and to explore the differences in music reward experiences in relation to the amount of musical activity, between genders and over ages. Approximately 30,000 Danish adolescents participated in a mass experiment with a subset (N = 4641, 51.2% girls, age range = 13–19 years old) responding to (1) a Danish adaptation of the BMRQ and (2) the Concurrent Musical Activities (CCM) Questionnaire. Both exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were applied, and a seven‐factor model of the BMRQ was found to fit the Danish adolescent population. The seven‐factor version of the Danish BMRQ was due to the split of the dimensions “Sensory‐Motor” and “Social Reward” into two further subfactors. The students with a higher amount of musical engagement scored higher across all dimensions. In particular, the higher the musical engagement, the higher scores were found for the facet of musical pleasure related to the sharing of musical activities, especially in the earliest stages of adolescence. Furthermore, we found that sensitivity to music generally tends to increase with age, and that girls reported overall to be more sensitive to music than boys in the dimension related to evocation of emotions. A slightly different model of the BMRQ has to be taken into account when testing the Danish adolescent population. In addition to utilizing the Danish version of the BMRQ on a large sample of adolescents, this study may provide insight into the relationship between changes in the level of musical reward depending on amount of musical engagement and how musical reward unfolds within and between genders and across age groups during this developmental stage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Cardiac-Sympathetic Contractility and Neural Alpha-Band Power: Cross-Modal Collaboration during Approach-Avoidance Conflict.
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Dundon, Neil M., Stuber, Alexander, Bullock, Tom, Garcia, Javier O., Babenko, Viktoriya, Rizor, Elizabeth, Dengxian Yang, Giesbrecht, Barry, and Grafton, Scott T.
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REWARD (Psychology) , *SYMPATHETIC nervous system , *ELECTRIC shock , *NERVOUS system , *COGNITIVE ability , *ALPHA rhythm - Abstract
As evidence mounts that the cardiac-sympathetic nervous system reacts to challenging cognitive settings, we ask if these responses are epiphenomenal companions or if there is evidence suggesting a more intertwined role of this system with cognitive function. Healthy male and female human participants performed an approach-avoidance paradigm, trading off monetary reward for painful electric shock, while we recorded simultaneous electroencephalographic and cardiac-sympathetic signals. Participants were reward sensitive but also experienced approach-avoidance "conflict" when the subjective appeal of the reward was near equivalent to the revulsion of the cost. Drift-diffusion model parameters suggested that participants managed conflict in part by integrating larger volumes of evidence into choices (wider decision boundaries). Late alpha-band (neural) dynamics were consistent with widening decision boundaries serving to combat reward sensitivity and spread attention more fairly to all dimensions of available information. Independently, wider boundaries were also associated with cardiac "contractility" (an index of sympathetically mediated positive inotropy). We also saw evidence of conflict-specific "collaboration" between the neural and cardiac-sympathetic signals. In states of high conflict, the alignment (i.e., product) of alpha dynamics and contractility were associated with a further widening of the boundary, independent of either signal's singular association. Cross-trial coherence analyses provided additional evidence that the autonomic systems controlling cardiac-sympathetics might influence the assessment of information streams during conflict by disrupting or overriding reward processing. We conclude that cardiac-sympathetic control might play a critical role, in collaboration with cognitive processes, during the approach-avoidance conflict in humans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. LEAP2 is associated with impulsivity and reward sensitivity depending on the nutritional status and decreases with protein intake in humans.
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Andreoli, María F., Kruger, Ana Luz, Sokolov, Aleksandr V., Rukh, Gull, De Francesco, Pablo N., Perello, Mario, and Schiöth, Helgi B.
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REWARD (Psychology) , *ANTIMICROBIAL peptides , *SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms , *FOOD consumption , *BODY mass index - Abstract
Aim: Liver‐expressed antimicrobial peptide 2 (LEAP2) dynamics in human plasma and its association with feeding behaviour remain poorly understood. Therefore, this study aims: (a) to investigate fasting LEAP2 in participants with normal weight or with overweight or mild obesity (OW/OB); (b) to study the association between fasting LEAP2 and anthropometric and metabolic traits, feeding behaviour, LEAP2 genetic variants and blood cell DNA methylation status; and (c) to ascertain postprandial changes in LEAP2 after high protein intake and the association with feeding behaviour and food intake. Methods: Anthropometric and behavioural measures, genotyping, methylation profiling, plasma glucose and LEAP2 concentrations were assessed in 327 females and males. A subgroup of 123 participants received an ad libitum high‐protein meal, and postprandial LEAP2 concentration and behavioural measures were assessed. Results: LEAP2 concentration was higher in participants with OW/OB (p < 0.001) and in females (p < 0.001), and was associated with LEAP2 single nucleotide polymorphisms rs765760 (p = 0.012) and rs803223 (p = 0.019), but not with LEAP2 methylation status. LEAP2 concentration was directly related to glycaemia (p = 0.001) and fullness (p = 0.003) in participants with normal weight, whereas it was associated with body mass index (p = 0.018), waist circumference (p = 0.014) and motor impulsivity in participants with OW/OB (p = 0.005). A negative association with reward responsiveness was observed in participants with OW/OB (p = 0.023). LEAP2 concentration was inversely associated with food intake (p = 0.034) and decreased after a high‐protein meal (p < 0.001), particularly in women (p = 0.002). Conclusion: Increased LEAP2 in participants with OW/OB is associated with behavioural characteristics of obesity. Our results show sexual dimorphism in LEAP2 concentration before and after food intake and highlight the role of LEAP2 in feeding regulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. The effects of threat on complex decision-making: evidence from a virtual environment.
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Laycock, Aaron, Schofield, Guy, and McCall, Cade
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Individuals living and working in dangerous settings (e.g., first responders and military personnel) make complex decisions amidst serious threats. However, controlled studies on decision-making under threat are limited given obvious ethical concerns. Here, we embed a complex decision-making task within a threatening, immersive virtual environment. Based on the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT), a paradigm widely used to study complex decision-making, the task requires participants to make a series of choices to escape a collapsing building. In Study 1 we demonstrate that, as with the traditional IGT, participants learn to make advantageous decisions over time and that their behavioural data can be described by reinforcement-learning based computational models. In Study 2 we created threatening and neutral versions of the environment. In the threat condition, participants performed worse, taking longer to improve from baseline and scoring lower through the final trials. Computational modelling further revealed that participants in the threat condition were more responsive to short term rewards and less likely to perseverate on a given choice. These findings suggest that when threat is integral to decision-making, individuals make more erratic choices and focus on short term gains. They furthermore demonstrate the utility of virtual environments for making threat integral to cognitive tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Delay discounting and nucleus accumbens functional connectivity are related to weight status in adolescents from the ABCD study.
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Overholtzer, L. Nate, Ahmadi, Hedyeh, Bottenhorn, Katherine, Hsu, Eustace, and Herting, Megan M.
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NUCLEUS accumbens , *REWARD (Psychology) , *DELAY discounting (Psychology) , *FUNCTIONAL connectivity , *NEURAL development - Abstract
Summary Background Objectives/Methods Results Conclusions Despite the growing epidemic of paediatric obesity, questions remain regarding potential neural mechanisms for individual risk. Delay discounting is a cognitive process of comparison of valuation between immediate and delayed reward, which has been inconsistently linked to weight status. Moreover, central to the brain's reward system is the nucleus accumbens, a region structurally and functionally altered in obesity.This study aimed to examine the relationships between two continuous metrics of weight status, performance on a monetary delay‐discounting task and nucleus accumbens functional connectivity in 10–12‐year‐olds from the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study.Using multilevel longitudinal linear modelling, we found greater discounting was associated with higher BMI Z‐scores (BMIz) and waist‐to‐height ratio Z‐scores (WHtRz) (N = 3819). Moreover, we observed functional connectivity of the nucleus accumbens to the cingulo‐opercular, dorsal attention, fronto‐parietal, salience and ventral attention networks were predictive of BMIz (N = 1817). Nucleus accumbens functional connectivity was not found to mediate the association between delay‐discounting behaviour and BMIz.Delay discounting and nucleus accumbens functional connectivity are independently related to weight status in a large sample of early adolescents. A better understanding of the relationship between reward and overeating behaviours may better inform obesity interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Prefrontal-Limbic Circuitry Is Associated With Reward Sensitivity in Nonhuman Primates.
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Hur, Kwang-Hyun, Meisler, Steven L., Yassin, Walid, Frederick, Blaise B., and Kohut, Stephen J.
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REWARD (Psychology) , *HYPERPHAGIA , *GRAY matter (Nerve tissue) , *CINGULATE cortex , *WHITE matter (Nerve tissue) - Abstract
Abnormal reward sensitivity is a risk factor for psychiatric disorders, including eating disorders such as overeating and binge-eating disorder, but the brain structural mechanisms that underlie it are not completely understood. Here, we sought to investigate the relationship between multimodal whole-brain structural features and reward sensitivity in nonhuman primates. Reward sensitivity was evaluated through behavioral economic analysis in which monkeys (adult rhesus macaques; 7 female, 5 male) responded for sweetened condensed milk (10%, 30%, 56%), Gatorade, or water using an operant procedure in which the response requirement increased incrementally across sessions (i.e., fixed ratio 1, 3, 10). Animals were divided into high (n = 6) or low (n = 6) reward sensitivity groups based on essential value for 30% milk. Multimodal magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure gray matter volume and white matter microstructure. Brain structural features were compared between groups, and their correlations with reward sensitivity for various stimuli was investigated. Animals in the high sensitivity group had greater dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, centromedial amygdaloid complex, and middle cingulate cortex volumes than animals in the low sensitivity group. Furthermore, compared with monkeys in the low sensitivity group, high sensitivity monkeys had lower fractional anisotropy in the left dorsal cingulate bundle connecting the centromedial amygdaloid complex and middle cingulate cortex to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and in the left superior longitudinal fasciculus 1 connecting the middle cingulate cortex to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. These results suggest that neuroanatomical variation in prefrontal-limbic circuitry is associated with reward sensitivity. These brain structural features may serve as predictive biomarkers for vulnerability to food-based and other reward-related disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. The path from mood symptoms to substance use: A longitudinal examination in individuals with and at risk for bipolar spectrum disorders.
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Smith, Logan T., Bishop, Olivia C., Nusslock, Robin, and Alloy, Lauren B.
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *BIPOLAR disorder , *REWARD (Psychology) , *RISK-taking behavior , *SYMPTOMS , *AUDITORY neuropathy - Abstract
Adolescent substance use poses a critical public health challenge, intertwined with risk-taking behavior, criminality, functional impairment, and comorbid mental and physical health issues. Adolescents with bipolar spectrum disorders (BSD) exhibit heightened susceptibility to substance use, necessitating a nuanced exploration of the bipolar-substance use relationship. This study addressed gaps in the literature by employing a prospective, longitudinal design with 443 Philadelphia-area adolescents, tracking BSD symptoms and substance use. We predicted that BSD symptoms would be associated with increases in substance use, and that these effects would be more pronounced for individuals with a BSD and those with high reward sensitivity. Hypomanic symptoms predicted subsequent substance use, with a stronger association observed in individuals diagnosed with BSD. Contrary to expectations, depressive symptoms did not exhibit a similar relationship. Although the hypothesized moderating role of reward sensitivity was not supported, higher reward sensitivity predicted increased substance use. Symptoms and substance use are only captured for the month prior to each session due to the assessment timeline. This highlights the benefits of frequent assessments over a shorter time frame to monitor real-time changes. Alternative classification methods for reward sensitivity, such as brain or behavior-based assessments, might yield different results. This study's contributions include evaluating substance use broadly, utilizing a longitudinal design for temporal clarity, and shifting the focus from substance use predicting mood symptoms to the inverse. The findings underscore the need for continued exploration of mood symptom predictors of substance use, emphasizing the role of reward sensitivity. • Substance use (SU) among adolescents poses a critical public health challenge • Adolescents with a bipolar spectrum disorder (BSD) have greater susceptibility to SU • Heighted reward sensitivity (RS) also may exacerbate this vulnerability • Findings confirmed that hypomanic, but not depressive, symptoms led to increased SU • This relationship was more pronounced for individuals with a BSD but not elevated RS [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Sensation seeking and risk adjustment: the role of reward sensitivity in dynamic risky decisions
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Yin Qianlan, Chen Shou, Hou Tianya, Dong Wei, and Taosheng Liu
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sensation seeking ,risk adjustment ,reward sensitivity ,risky decisions ,cognitive model ,neural activity ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
ObjectiveThe primary objective of our research is to delve into the relationships between sensation seeking (SS), reward sensitivity (RS), and risk adjustment (RA) within the context of dynamic risk-taking behaviors. By integrating the reinforcement learning model and neural measures obtained from dynamic risk-taking tasks, we aim to explore how these personality traits influence individual decision-making processes and engagement in risk-related activities. We aim to dissect the neural and cognitive mechanisms underlying this interplay, thereby shedding light on the stable brain-based characteristics contributing to the observed variability in risk-taking and decision-making behaviors. Understanding these links could significantly enhance our ability to predict individual differences in risk preferences and develop targeted interventions for managing risky behaviors across different contexts.MethodWe developed a task to measure RA through a structured yet uncertain environment modeled after the Balloon Analog Risk Task. We enlisted 80 young adults to perform this task, and of these, 40 were subjected to electroencephalography (EEG) to assess neural correlates of RS. Subsequently, we analyzed event-related potentials and spectral perturbations to discern neural distinctions related to RS. We compared these distinctions concerning RA among participants exhibiting different levels of SS.ResultsIndividuals exhibiting higher levels of SS (HSS) in the study displayed a tendency to disregard past risks, potentially resulting in diminished behavioral adaptability. EEG results indicated that individuals with HSS exhibited reduced neural responses to feedback compared to those with low SS, potentially affecting their feedback processing and decision-making. Moreover, the comparison of effects underscores the significant impact of RS and SS on shaping RA during dynamic decision-making scenarios.ConclusionThis study has advanced the understanding of how SS and RS influence RA, revealing that RS prompts RA, while individuals with HSS often exhibit blunted RS, leading to worse RA. Future research should focus on the specific aspects of HSS and their implications for decision-making across different risk contexts. Employing advanced neuroimaging and cognitive modeling techniques will be pivotal in unraveling the neural mechanisms driving these individual differences in risky behavior.
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- 2025
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19. Mood Symptom Dimensions and Developmental Differences in Neurocognition in Adolescence
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Kaiser, Roselinde H, Moser, Amelia D, Neilson, Chiara, Peterson, Elena C, Jones, Jenna, Hough, Christina M, Rosenberg, Benjamin M, Sandman, Christina F, Schneck, Christopher D, Miklowitz, David J, and Friedman, Naomi P
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Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Depression ,Neurosciences ,Mental health ,reward sensitivity ,executive functioning ,age ,puberty ,mania ,anhedonia ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
Adolescence is critical period of neurocognitive development as well as increased prevalence of mood pathology. This cross-sectional study replicated developmental patterns of neurocognition and tested whether mood symptoms moderated developmental effects. Participants were 419 adolescents (n=246 with current mood disorders) who completed reward learning and executive functioning tasks, and reported on age, puberty, and mood symptoms. Structural equation modeling revealed a quadratic relationship between puberty and reward learning performance that was moderated by symptom severity: in early puberty, adolescents reporting higher manic symptoms exhibited heightened reward learning performance (better maximizing of rewards on learning tasks), whereas adolescents reporting elevated anhedonia showed blunted reward learning performance. Models also showed a linear relationship between age and executive functioning that was moderated by manic symptoms: adolescents reporting higher mania showed poorer executive functioning at older ages. Findings suggest neurocognitive development is altered in adolescents with mood pathology and suggest directions for longitudinal studies.
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- 2023
20. The Relationship between Power, Sense of Power, and Cognitive Flexibility: An Analysis of Parallel Mediating Effects Based on Reward and Punishment Sensitivity.
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Cao, Shiyue and Yang, Dong
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REWARD (Psychology) , *COGNITIVE flexibility , *COGNITIVE analysis , *POWER (Social sciences) , *CULTURAL landscapes - Abstract
This study utilized a sample of 2052 participants from government and enterprise sectors to explore the distinct effects of power and sense of power on cognitive flexibility. It also delves into how the three dimensions of reward sensitivity and the comprehensive measure of punishment sensitivity mediate this relationship. The key findings are as follows: (1) There is no significant direct correlation between power and sense of power. (2) Both power and sense of power are substantial positive predictors of cognitive flexibility, with middle- and upper-level employees demonstrating significantly greater cognitive flexibility than their lower-level counterparts, and sense of power having a more pronounced positive influence than objective power. (3) Drive and fun-seeking mediate the relationship between sense of power and cognitive flexibility, yet only when sense of power is the independent variable. (4) No mediating effects are observed for the dimensions of reward sensitivity or punishment sensitivity when power is the independent variable. Exploring reward and punishment sensitivity in the context of power's influence on cognitive flexibility in real organizational settings is of paramount importance. This enhances our understanding of the intricate ways in which power dynamics shape individual behaviors and cognition across diverse cultural landscapes and provides actionable insights for refining organizational management and leadership strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. The association between delinquent peer affiliation and disruptive behavior interacts with functional brain correlates of reward sensitivity: a biosocial interaction study in adolescent delinquents.
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Tielbeek, Jorim J, van der Hooft, Maarten, Cohn, Moran D, van de Ven, Peter M, Polderman, Tinca JC, Veltman, Dick J, Posthuma, Danielle, Schuengel, Carlo, van Domburgh, Lieke, and Popma, Arne
- Subjects
- *
JUVENILE delinquency , *BEHAVIOR disorders , *RISK assessment , *CROSS-sectional method , *STATISTICAL power analysis , *RISK-taking behavior , *DATA analysis , *ECOLOGY , *AFFINITY groups , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *REWARD (Psychology) , *AGE factors in disease , *AGGRESSION (Psychology) , *STATISTICS , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background: Affiliating with delinquent peers may stimulate the development of antisocial behavior, especially for adolescents who are sensitive to social rewards. The current study examines whether the association between delinquent peer affiliation (DPA) and disruptive behavior interacts with functional brain correlates of reward sensitivity in early onset male adolescents delinquents. Methods: Childhood arrestees (n = 126, mean age = 17.7 [s.d. 1.6]) completed a DPA questionnaire, and participated in an fMRI study in which reward sensitivity was operationalized through responsiveness of the ventral striatum (VS), amygdala, and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) during the monetary incentive delay paradigm (reward anticipation and outcome). Symptoms of disruptive behavior disorders (DBD) were assessed through structured psychiatric interviews (Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children) with adolescents. Results: DPA had a main effect on DBD symptoms. Adolescents with high VS reward responses showed a stronger significant positive association between DPA and DBD symptoms compared to low VS responders. No evidence for an interaction effect was found for the amygdala and mPFC. Post-hoc analyses revealed the positive association between DPA and DBD was only present in males, with a diminishing effect as age increased. Conclusions: We found evidence for a biosocial interaction between DPA and reward sensitivity of the VS in relation to DBD symptom severity. This study provides the first evidence of an interaction effect between a brain mechanism and an environmental factor in relation to DBD symptoms, implying that susceptibility to influences of delinquent peers may intertwine with individual biological differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Examining the Association between Punishment and Reward Sensitivity and Response Inhibition to Previously-Incentivized Cues across Development.
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Heffer, Taylor, Flournoy, John C., Baum, Graham L., and Somerville, Leah H.
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SELF-evaluation , *PROMPTS (Psychology) , *GOVERNMENT policy , *RESEARCH funding , *GOAL (Psychology) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DECISION making , *REWARD (Psychology) , *TEENAGERS' conduct of life , *PUNISHMENT - Abstract
Processing and learning from affective cues to guide goal-directed behavior may be particularly important during adolescence; yet the factors that promote and/or disrupt the ability to integrate value in order to guide decision making across development remain unclear. The present study (N = 1046) assessed individual difference factors (self-reported punishment and reward sensitivity) related to whether previously-rewarded and previously-punished cues differentially impact goal-directed behavior (response inhibition) in a large developmental sample. Participants were between the ages of 8–21 years (Mage = 14.29, SD = 3.97, 50.38% female). Previously-rewarded cues improved response inhibition among participants age 14 and older. Further, punishment sensitivity predicted overall improved response inhibition among participants aged 10 to 18. The results highlight two main factors that are associated with improvements in the ability to integrate value to guide goal-directed behaviour – cues in the environment (e.g., reward-laden cues) and individual differences in punishment sensitivity. These findings have implications for both educational and social policies aimed at characterizing the ways in which youth integrate value to guide decision making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
23. Impulsivity and reward and punishment sensitivity among patients admitted to a specialized inpatient eating disorder treatment program.
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Martinelli, Mary K., Schreyer, Colleen C., Vanzhula, Irina A., and Guarda, Angela S.
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BULIMIA ,REWARD (Psychology) ,EATING disorders ,TREATMENT programs ,IMPULSIVE personality ,IMPOTENCE ,SCHOOL dropout prevention - Abstract
Introduction: Eating disorders (EDs) are conceptualized as disorders of underand over-control, with impulsivity reflecting under-control. Extant research indicates that impulsivity and related factors such as reward sensitivity and punishment sensitivity may serve as trait-level transdiagnostic risk and/or maintenance factors in EDs. Findings on impulsivity and reward and punishment sensitivity by diagnosis are mixed and research on the relationship between these factors and ED symptoms, hospital course, and treatment outcomes is limited. Methods: Participants (N = 228) were patients admitted to a specialized inpatient behavioral treatment program for EDs who agreed to participate in a longitudinal study and completed self-report measures of impulsivity, reward sensitivity, and punishment sensitivity at admission. Weight and ED symptomatology were measured at admission and discharge. Hospital course variables included length of stay and premature treatment dropout. Results: Impulsivity was lower in individuals with anorexia nervosa (AN) restricting type compared to those with AN binge/purge type or bulimia nervosa; no other group differences were observed. Higher impulsivity was associated with greater bulimic symptoms on the Eating Disorder Inventory 2 (EDI-2) at admission. Impulsivity was not related to ED symptoms, weight outcomes, length of hospital stay, or treatment dropout at program discharge. Conclusion: Impulsivity may help distinguish restrictive versus binge/purge EDs, but does not necessarily relate to discharge outcomes in an intensive inpatient ED program. Findings from this study provide novel contributions to the literature on personality traits in EDs and have important clinical implications. Results suggest that patients with higher levels of impulsivity or reward and punishment sensitivity can be expected to respond to inpatient treatment. Suggestions for future research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Aberrant reward processing to positive versus negative outcomes across psychotic disorders.
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Le, Thanh, Green, Michael, Lee, Junghee, Clayson, Peter, Jimenez, Amy, Reavis, Eric, Horan, William, and Wynn, Jonathan
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Reinforcement learning ,Reward learning ,Reward sensitivity ,Schizophrenia ,Social rewards ,Humans ,Psychotic Disorders - Abstract
Several studies of reward processing in schizophrenia have shown reduced sensitivity to positive, but not negative, outcomes although inconsistencies have been reported. In addition, few studies have investigated whether patients show a relative deficit to social versus nonsocial rewards, whether deficits occur across the spectrum of psychosis, or whether deficits relate to negative symptoms and functioning. This study examined probabilistic implicit learning via two visually distinctive slot machines for social and nonsocial rewards in 101 outpatients with diverse psychotic disorders and 48 community controls. The task consisted of two trial types: positive (optimal to choose a positive vs. neutral machine) and negative (optimal to choose a neutral vs. negative machine), with two reward conditions: social (faces) and nonsocial (money) reward conditions. A significant group X trial type interaction indicated that controls performed better on positive than negative trials, whereas patients showed the opposite pattern of better performance on negative than positive trials. In addition, both groups performed better for social than nonsocial stimuli, despite lower overall task performance in patients. Within patients, worse performance on negative trials showed significant, small-to-moderate correlations with motivation and pleasure-related negative symptoms and social functioning. The current findings suggest reward processing disturbances, particularly decreased sensitivity to positive outcomes, extend beyond schizophrenia to a broader spectrum of psychotic disorders and relate to important clinical outcomes.
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- 2022
25. Protocol for project MIME: Motivation, Inflammation, and Mood in Emerging Adults
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Moriarity, Daniel P, Kautz, Marin M, Ghias, Kubarah, Pennypacker, Kirsta, Harmon-Jones, Eddie, and Alloy, Lauren B
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Brain Disorders ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Serious Mental Illness ,Depression ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Anger incentive delay task ,Bipolar disorder ,Cognitive vulnerabilities ,Hypomania ,Inflammation ,Mania ,Reward sensitivity ,Rumination ,Stress ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundAtypical inflammatory biology is gaining evidence as a risk factor for mood psychopathology; however, little work has attempted to integrate inflammation into extant psychosocial frameworks of risk. Recent work using secondary data analysis has investigated the possibility of an immunocognitive model of mood disorders, in which cognitive vulnerabilities (i.e., rumination on positive or negative affect) increase the effect that arousal-related characteristics (e.g., reward sensitivity) have on inflammatory biology in ways that may confer risk for depression and hypo/mania symptoms. Project MIME (Motivation, Inflammation, and Mood in Emerging Adults) was designed to test this model in the context of a novel, reward-salient stressor (the Anger Incentive Delay Task, AIDT).MethodsThis NIMH-funded study will result in a dataset of approximately 100 college undergraduates from a large university in Pennsylvania, United States of America. Eligible participants are recruited from an online screener, have to be 18-22 years old, fluent in English, and successfully answer several items designed to test whether participants randomly answer questions on the screener. Eligible participants are invited to an in-person visit in which they completed the AIDT, blood draws pre- and 50 minutes post-AIDT, and self-report questionnaires. Participants also complete a set of online questionnaires two weeks after the in-person visit.DiscussionConsistent with calls from the NIH director, this study seeks to diversify the tools used in stress research by validating a novel reward-salient stressor (in contrast to the field's reliance on social stressors) with respect to affective and immunological stress reactivity. In addition to this methodological goal, Project MIME is the first study specifically designed to test the immunocognitive model of mood psychopathology. Given the integration of several malleable treatment targets (approach behavior, emotion regulation, inflammation) into this model, results from this study could inform comprehensive, flexible intervention strategies for mood disorder prevention and treatment.
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- 2022
26. Imager—A mobile health mental imagery‐based ecological momentary intervention targeting reward sensitivity: A randomized controlled trial.
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Marciniak, Marta Anna, Shanahan, Lilly, Myin‐Germeys, Inez, Veer, Ilya Milos, Yuen, Kenneth S. L., Binder, Harald, Walter, Henrik, Hermans, Erno J., Kalisch, Raffael, and Kleim, Birgit
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- *
REWARD (Psychology) , *ECOLOGICAL momentary assessments (Clinical psychology) , *MOBILE health , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL illness - Abstract
Robust reward sensitivity may help preserve mental well‐being in the face of adversity and has been proposed as a key stress resilience factor. Here, we present a mobile health application, "Imager," which targets reward sensitivity by training individuals to create mental images of future rewarding experiences. We conducted a two‐arm randomized controlled trial with 95 participants screened for reward sensitivity. Participants in the intervention group received an ecological momentary intervention—Imager, which encouraged participants to create mental images of rewarding events for 1 week. The control group participants received only ecological momentary assessment, without the instruction to generate mental images. Adherence to Imager was high; participants in the intervention group engaged in 88% of the planned activities. In the follow‐up assessment, the intervention group reported less mental health symptoms, mainly in depression (β = −0.34, df = 93, p =.004) and less perceived stress (β = −0.18, df = 93, p =.035), than control group participants and compared with the baseline assessment. Our results show the positive effects of Imager on mental health symptoms. The encouraging effects of the app on mental health outcomes may lead to greater use of ecological momentary interventions in the clinical preventive practice of affective disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Task-Evoked Neural Activity During Reward Anticipation and Inhibitory Control in Preadolescent Binge Eating Disorder.
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Murray, Stuart B., Zhang, Ru, Duval, Christina J., Nagata, Jason M., and Jann, Kay
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Behavioral features of binge eating disorder (BED) suggest abnormalities in reward and inhibitory control. Studies of adult populations suggest functional abnormalities in reward and inhibitory control networks. Despite behavioral markers often developing in children, the neurobiology of pediatric BED remains unstudied. Fifty eight preadolescent children (aged 9–10 years) with BED and 68 age, body mass index and developmentally matched control children were extracted from the 3.0 baseline (Year 0) release of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. We investigated task-evoked blood-oxygen-level-dependent response during functional magnetic resonance imaging, as participants completed the monetary incentive delay task and the stop signal task. We indexed group differences in regions of interest in the reward (orbitofrontal cortex, nucleus accumbens) and inhibitory control (dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex). No significant group differences emerged during tasks of inhibitory control among children with BED and children without BED. Similarly, no significant group differences emerged during the anticipation or receipt of reward among children with BED and children without BED. Preadolescent children with BED do not demonstrate abnormal neural activity in prominent nodes of reward or inhibitory control circuitry during tasks of inhibitory control, reward anticipation, and reward receipt, relative to children without BED who also had a similar body mass index. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Change in motivational bias during treatment predicts outcome in anorexia nervosa.
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Abber, Sophie R., Murray, Susan M., Brown, Carina S., and Wierenga, Christina E.
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MATHEMATICAL variables , *RESEARCH funding , *HOSPITAL care , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *INTERVIEWING , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ANXIETY , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *REWARD (Psychology) , *EATING disorders , *ANOREXIA nervosa , *PUNISHMENT , *RESEARCH methodology , *ANTHROPOMETRY , *EVALUATION - Abstract
Objective: Reward and punishment sensitivity are known to be altered in anorexia nervosa (AN). Most research has examined these constructs separately although motivated behavior is influenced by considering both the potential for reward and risk of punishment. The present study sought to compare the relative balance of reward and punishment sensitivity in AN versus healthy controls (HCs) and examine whether motivational bias is associated with AN symptoms and treatment outcomes. Methods: Adolescents and adults with AN (n = 262) in a partial hospitalization program completed the Eating Disorders Examination Questionnaire (EDE‐Q), Behavioral Inhibition System/Behavioral Activation System (BIS/BAS) scales, and Sensitivity to Punishment/Sensitivity to Reward Questionnaire (SPSRQ) at admission and discharge. HCs (HC; n = 90) completed the BIS/BAS and SPSRQ. Motivational Bias Scores were calculated to reflect the dominance of reward versus punishment sensitivity. Results: Individuals with AN demonstrated significantly greater bias toward punishment sensitivity than HC. In AN, a bias toward punishment was associated with higher EDE‐Q Global score at admission. Change in motivational bias during treatment predicted EDE‐Q Global scores, but not BMI, at discharge, with greater increases in reward sensitivity or greater decreases in punishment sensitivity during treatment predicting lower eating pathology. Similar findings were observed using the BIS/BAS and SPSRQ. Discussion: Change in motivational bias during treatment is associated with improved outcomes in AN. However, it appears that much of the change in motivational bias can be attributed to changes in punishment sensitivity, rather than reward sensitivity. Future research should examine the mechanisms underlying punishment sensitivity decreases during treatment. Public Significance: Sensitivity to reward and punishment may be important treatment targets for individuals with anorexia nervosa (AN). To date, most research has considered reward and punishment sensitivity separately, rather than examining their relationship to each other. We found that the balance of reward and punishment sensitivity (i.e., motivational bias) differs between healthy controls and those with AN and that this bias is associated with eating disorder symptoms and treatment outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Adolescent Internet Gaming Disorder and sensitivity to money and social rewards
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Yuetan Wang, Yiyao Li, Beichen Liu, Xuan Zhao, Xicong Geng, Wenjing Zhu, and Xiaobin Ding
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Adolescents ,Internet gaming addiction ,Monetary rewards ,Social rewards ,Reward sensitivity ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Internet Gaming Disorder (IGD) is a behavioural addiction characterised by excessive exposure to addictive stimuli, resulting in reduced sensitivity of the brain's reward system towards everyday rewards. Online game addiction is prevalent among adolescents; however, it remains unclear if there are variations in reward processing patterns among adolescents with online game addiction.We compared differences in sensitivity to two types of rewards between patients with IGD and patients with Recreational Game Use (RGU) using the Monetary Incentive Delay (MID) paradigm and the Social Incentive Delay (SID) paradigm (Experiment 1). Additionally, we used a mixed reward latency paradigm, including both monetary and social rewards, to further explore the processing characteristics of IGD towards a mixture of these two rewards (Experiment 2).There were significant differences in the sensitivity of IGD and RGU to monetary and social rewards. Adolescents with IGD had significantly shorter reaction times to the four mixed rewards compared to RGU, while no significant differences were found between groups regarding sensitivity to specific individual rewards. However, the simultaneous presence of two rewards affected the processing speed and preference of adolescents with IGD.The reward processing characteristics observed in adolescents with online gaming disorder show specificity concerning the type and presentation of rewards, providing a theoretical foundation for diagnosing and treating adolescent online gaming addiction.
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- 2024
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30. Space, time, and context drive anticipatory behavior: Considerations for understanding the behavior of animals in human care
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Krebs, Bethany L, Chudeau, Karli R, Eschmann, Caitlin L, Tu, Celina W, Pacheco, Eridia, and Watters, Jason V
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Veterinary Sciences ,Agricultural ,Veterinary and Food Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,animal welfare ,welfare indicator ,reward sensitivity ,zoo animal ,welfare assessment ,Veterinary sciences - Abstract
Animal-based measures reflecting the welfare state of individuals are critical for ensuring the well-being of animals under human care. Anticipatory behavior is one potential animal-based measure that has gained traction in recent years, as it is theorized to relate to animals' reward sensitivity. It is of particular interest as an assessment for animals living under human care, as the predictability of the captive environment lends itself to the development of this class of behaviors. Animals are likely to exhibit anticipation in locations related to the anticipated event, often in temporally predictable time frames, and before specific contexts they experience in their day-to-day management. In this sense and under certain circumstances, anticipatory behaviors are likely to drive observed behavioral or space use patterns of animals under human care. Drawing conclusions from such data without identifying anticipation may result in misleading conclusions. Here we discuss how space, time, and context are related to patterns of anticipatory behaviors in animals under human care, how unidentified anticipation may alter conclusions regarding animal behavior or welfare under certain circumstances.
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- 2022
31. Affective Disorders in Development
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Morningstar, Michele A., Mattson, Whitney I., Nelson, Eric E., and Cohen Kadosh, Kathrin, book editor
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- 2024
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32. Transdiagnostic considerations of the relationship between reward sensitivity and psychopathological symptoms - a cross-lagged panel analysis
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L. Potsch and W. Rief
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Reward processing ,Reward sensitivity ,Depression ,Alcohol consumption ,Social anxiety ,Eating disorder ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background Reward sensitivity constitutes a potential key mechanism regarding the etiology and maintenance of mental disorders, especially depression. However, due to a lack of longitudinal studies, the temporal dynamics are not clear yet. Although some evidence indicates that reward processing could be a transdiagnostic mechanism of disorders, these observations could be also a product of comorbidity with depression. This study aimed at investigating the temporal dynamics of reward sensitivity and the course of psychopathological symptoms in a longitudinal investigation, while taking a possible mediating role of depression into account. Methods We conducted a three-wave longitudinal online survey with a 4-week interval. A total of N = 453 participants filled out all three questionnaires. Reward sensitivity was assessed with the Positive Valence System Scale-21 (PVSS-21), depression with the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), eating disorder symptoms with the Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire-8 (EDE-Q-8), social anxiety with the Mini-social phobia inventory (Mini-SPIN) and alcohol consumption with the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test-Consumption (AUDIT-C). Cross-lagged panels and mediation analyses were calculated using path analyses. Results Depressive and eating disorder symptoms predicted reward insensitivity at later points in time. Effects were larger from T2 to T3. A bidirectional relationship concerning social anxiety was found. Higher alcohol consumption predicted higher reward sensitivity. Depression at T2 fully mediated the association between psychopathological symptoms at T1 and reward sensitivity at T3 for social anxiety and eating disorder symptoms. Conclusions Our findings imply that reduced reward sensitivity seems to be a consequence rather than an antecedent of psychopathological symptoms. Comorbid depression plays a crucial role in other mental disorders regarding observed hyposensitivity towards rewards. Therefore, our results do not support a transdiagnostic notion of reward sensitivity, but they indicate a potential role of reward sensitivity for symptom persistence. Trial registration The study was preregistered at the Open Science Framework (OSF) ( https://archive.org/details/osf-registrations-6n3s8-v1 ; registration DOI https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/6N3S8 ).
- Published
- 2023
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33. Impulsivity and reward and punishment sensitivity among patients admitted to a specialized inpatient eating disorder treatment program
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Mary K. Martinelli, Colleen C. Schreyer, Irina A. Vanzhula, and Angela S. Guarda
- Subjects
eating disorders ,inpatient treatment ,treatment ,impulsivity ,reward sensitivity ,punishment sensitivity ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
IntroductionEating disorders (EDs) are conceptualized as disorders of under- and over-control, with impulsivity reflecting under-control. Extant research indicates that impulsivity and related factors such as reward sensitivity and punishment sensitivity may serve as trait-level transdiagnostic risk and/or maintenance factors in EDs. Findings on impulsivity and reward and punishment sensitivity by diagnosis are mixed and research on the relationship between these factors and ED symptoms, hospital course, and treatment outcomes is limited.MethodsParticipants (N = 228) were patients admitted to a specialized inpatient behavioral treatment program for EDs who agreed to participate in a longitudinal study and completed self-report measures of impulsivity, reward sensitivity, and punishment sensitivity at admission. Weight and ED symptomatology were measured at admission and discharge. Hospital course variables included length of stay and premature treatment dropout.ResultsImpulsivity was lower in individuals with anorexia nervosa (AN) restricting type compared to those with AN binge/purge type or bulimia nervosa; no other group differences were observed. Higher impulsivity was associated with greater bulimic symptoms on the Eating Disorder Inventory 2 (EDI-2) at admission. Impulsivity was not related to ED symptoms, weight outcomes, length of hospital stay, or treatment dropout at program discharge.ConclusionImpulsivity may help distinguish restrictive versus binge/purge EDs, but does not necessarily relate to discharge outcomes in an intensive inpatient ED program. Findings from this study provide novel contributions to the literature on personality traits in EDs and have important clinical implications. Results suggest that patients with higher levels of impulsivity or reward and punishment sensitivity can be expected to respond to inpatient treatment. Suggestions for future research are discussed.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Reward Sensitivity and Noise Contribute to Negative Affective Bias: A Learning Signal Detection Theory Approach in Decision-Making
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Isabel K. Lütkenherm, Shannon M. Locke, and Oliver J. Robinson
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negative affective bias ,signal detection theory ,mood disorders ,reward sensitivity ,reinforcement learning ,prospect theory ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 ,Consciousness. Cognition ,BF309-499 - Abstract
In patients with mood disorders, negative affective biases – systematically prioritising and interpreting information negatively – are common. A translational cognitive task testing this bias has shown that depressed patients have a reduced preference for a high reward under ambiguous decision-making conditions. The precise mechanisms underscoring this bias are, however, not yet understood. We therefore developed a set of measures to probe the underlying source of the behavioural bias by testing its relationship to a participant’s reward sensitivity, value sensitivity and reward learning rate. One-hundred-forty-eight participants completed three online behavioural tasks: the original ambiguous-cue decision-making task probing negative affective bias, a probabilistic reward learning task probing reward sensitivity and reward learning rate, and a gambling task probing value sensitivity. We modelled the learning task through a dynamic signal detection theory model and the gambling task through an expectation-maximisation prospect theory model. Reward sensitivity from the probabilistic reward task (β = 0.131, p = 0.024) and setting noise from the probabilistic reward task (β = –0.187, p = 0.028) both predicted the affective bias score in a logistic regression. Increased negative affective bias, at least on this specific task, may therefore be driven in part by a combination of reduced sensitivity to rewards and more variable responses.
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- 2024
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35. An fMRI dataset of social and nonsocial reward processing in young adults
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David V. Smith, James Wyngaarden, Cooper J. Sharp, Daniel Sazhin, Ori Zaff, Dominic Fareri, and Johanna Jarcho
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Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,fMRI ,Substance use ,Decision making ,Brain ,Reward sensitivity ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Trait reward sensitivity, risk for developing substance use, and mood disorders have each been linked with altered striatal responses to reward. Moreover, striatal response to reward is sensitive to social context, such as the presence of a peer, and drugs are often sought out and consumed in social contexts or as a result of social experiences. Thus, mood disorder symptoms, striatal responses to social context and social reward may play a role in substance use. To investigate this possibility, this dataset was collected as part of a National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) grant titled “Aberrant Reward Sensitivity: Mechanisms Underlying Substance Use” (R03-DA046733). The overarching goal was to characterize the associations between neural responses to social and nonsocial rewards, trait reward sensitivity, substance use, and mood disorder symptoms. After obtaining questionnaire data quantifying reward sensitivity, substance use, and other psychosocial characteristics, young adults (N=59; 14 male, 45 female; mean age: 20.89 years ± 1.75 years) completed four fMRI tasks testing different features of social and reward processing. These included: 1) a strategic reward-based decision-making task with Ultimatum and Dictator Game conditions; 2) a task where participants shared rewards or losses with peers, strangers, or non-human partners; 3) a task in which participants received well-matched social and monetary rewards and punishment; and 4) a monetary incentive delay (MID) task in which participants tried to obtain or avoid rewards and losses of different magnitude. This dataset includes sociodemographic questionnaire data, anatomical, task-based fMRI, and corresponding behavioral task-based data. We outline several opportunities for extension and reuse, including exploration of individual differences, cross-task comparisons, and representational similarity analyses.
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- 2024
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36. The role of neural reward sensitivity in the longitudinal relations between parents’ familism values and Latinx American youth’s prosocial behaviors
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Beiming Yang, Zexi Zhou, Varun Devakonda, and Yang Qu
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Adolescence ,Familism ,Latinx ,Prosocial behavior ,Reward sensitivity ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
Past research suggests that parents’ familism values play a positive role in Latinx American youth’s prosocial tendencies. However, little is known about how individual differences in youth’s neural development may contribute to this developmental process. Therefore, using two-wave longitudinal data of 1916 early adolescents (mean age = 9.90 years; 50% girls) and their parents (mean age = 38.43 years; 90% mothers) from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study, this pre-registered study took a biopsychosocial approach to examine the moderating role of youth’s neural reward sensitivity in the link between parents’ familism values and youth’s prosocial behaviors. Results showed that parents’ familism values were associated with increased prosocial behaviors among youth two years later, controlling for baseline prosocial behaviors and demographic covariates. Notably, parents’ familism values played a larger role in promoting youth’s prosocial behaviors among youth who showed lower ventral striatum activation during reward anticipation. Moreover, such association between parents’ familism values and youth’s later prosocial behaviors was stronger among youth who showed lower levels of prosocial behaviors initially. Taken together, the findings highlight individual differences in neurobiological development and baseline prosocial behaviors as markers of sensitivity to cultural environments with regard to Latinx American youth’s prosocial development.
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- 2024
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37. Depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity in a dual valence, magnitude learning task.
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Pulcu, Erdem, Lin, Wanjun, Han, Sungwon, and Browning, Michael
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- *
BIOLOGICAL models , *REINFORCEMENT (Psychology) , *TASK performance , *RESEARCH funding , *ANXIETY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SEVERITY of illness index , *REWARD (Psychology) , *ANHEDONIA , *PUNISHMENT , *LEARNING strategies , *MENTAL depression , *SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Background: Learning from rewarded and punished choices is perturbed in depressed patients, suggesting that abnormal reinforcement learning may be a cognitive mechanism of the illness. However, previous studies have disagreed about whether this behavior is produced by alterations in the rate of learning or sensitivity to experienced outcomes. This previous work has generally assessed learning in response to binary outcomes of one valence, rather than to both rewarding and punishing continuous outcomes. Methods: A novel drifting reward and punishment magnitude reinforcement-learning task was administered to patients with current (n = 40) and remitted depression (n = 39), and healthy volunteers (n = 40) to capture potential differences in learning behavior. Standard questionnaires were administered to measure self-reported depressive symptom severity, trait and state anxiety and level of anhedonic symptoms. Results: Our findings demonstrate that patients with current depression adjust their learning behaviors to a lesser degree in response to trial-by-trial variations in reward and loss magnitudes than the other groups. Computational modeling revealed that this behavioral signature of current depressive state is better accounted for by reduced reward and punishment sensitivity (all p < 0.031), rather than a change in learning rate (p = 0.708). However, between-group differences were not related to self-reported symptom severity or comorbid anxiety disorders in the current depression group. Conclusion: These findings suggest that current depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity rather than altered learning rate. Previous findings reported in this domain mainly from binary learning tasks seem to generalize to learning from continuous outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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38. The functional connectivity between right parahippocampal gyrus and precuneus underlying the association between reward sensitivity and procrastination.
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Huo, Zhenzhen, Chen, Zhiyi, Zhang, Rong, Xu, Junye, and Feng, Tingyong
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FUNCTIONAL assessment ,CEREBRAL dominance ,SENSITIVITY analysis ,PROCRASTINATION ,CINGULATE cortex - Published
- 2024
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39. Associations between age, social reward processing and social anxiety symptoms.
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Kilford, Emma J., Foulkes, Lucy, and Blakemore, Sarah-Jayne
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REWARD (Psychology) ,SOCIAL anxiety ,SOCIAL processes ,ANXIETY disorders ,SOCIAL interaction ,INDIVIDUAL differences - Abstract
Reward processing undergoes marked changes in adolescence, with social interactions representing a powerful source of reward. Reward processing is also an important factor in the development of social anxiety disorder, a condition that most commonly first appears in adolescence. This study investigated the relationship between age, social reward processing and social anxiety in a cross-sectional sample of female participants (N = 80) aged 13–34. Participants performed two versions of a probabilistic reward anticipation task, in which a speeded response could result in different probabilities of receiving either social or monetary rewarding feedback. Participants also completed self-report assessments of social reward value, trait anxiety and social anxiety symptoms. At high reward probabilities, performance on both reward tasks showed a quadratic effect of age, with the fastest responses at around 22–24 years. A similar quadratic effect was found for subjective liking ratings of both reward stimuli, although these were not associated with performance. Social anxiety was not associated with a subjective liking of the rewards but did predict performance on both tasks at all reward probabilities. Age-related variation in reward processing was not accounted for by age-related variation in social anxiety symptoms, suggesting that, while both social anxiety and age were associated with variation in reward processing, their effects were largely independent. Together, these findings provide evidence that social reward processing continues to develop across adolescence and that individual differences in social anxiety should be considered when considering reward sensitivity during this period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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40. Heterogeneity of gaming disorder: A clinicallybased typology for developing personalized interventions.
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CHIH-HUNG KO, KIRÁLY, ORSOLYA, DEMETROVICS, ZSOLT, GRIFFITHS, MARK D., KATO, TAKAHIRO A., MASARU TATENO, and JU-YU YEN
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GENDER dysphoria , *GAMING disorder , *REWARD (Psychology) , *ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder , *CONTROL (Psychology) , *SOCIAL anxiety - Abstract
Background: The eleventh revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) defines the three key diagnostic criteria for gaming disorder (GD). These are loss of control over gaming, gaming as a priority over daily activities, and impaired functioning due to gaming. While this definition has implications for the prevention and treatment of GD, there is significant heterogeneity in the symptoms and etiology of GD among individuals, which results in different treatment needs. Cognitive control, emotional regulation, and reward sensitivity are three critical dimensions in the etiology model for GD. Aspects such as gender, comorbidity, motivation for gaming, stage or severity of GD, and risk factors all contribute to the heterogeneity of etiology among individuals with the disorder. Method: On the basis of clinical symptoms and comorbidity characteristics among approximately 400 patients with gaming disorder, the present paper proposes a clinical typology of patients with GD based on the authors' clinical experience in treating individuals with GD. Results: The findings indicated three common types of patients with GD: (i) impulsive male patients with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), (ii) dysphoria patients with dysfunctional coping skills, and (iii) isolated patients with social anxiety. The paper also discusses the presentation and treatment priority for these patients. Conclusion: Personalized treatments for patients with GD should be developed to fit their individual needs. Future studies should examine the heterogeneity of GD and confirm these types, as well as obtain evidence-based information that can help in the development of personalized treatment. Treatment resources should be developed, and professionals should be trained to provide integrated individualized treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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41. Neural response to rewards moderates the within‐person association between daily positive events and positive affect during a period of stress exposure.
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Renault, Héléna, Freeman, Clara, Banica, Iulia, Sandre, Aislinn, Ethridge, Paige, Park, Juhyun, and Weinberg, Anna
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Stress and neural responses to reward can interact to predict psychopathology, but the mechanisms of this interaction are unclear. One possibility is that the strength of neural responses to reward can affect the ability to maintain positive affect during stress. In this study, 105 participants completed a monetary reward task to elicit the reward positivity (RewP), an event‐related potential sensitive to rewards. Subsequently, during a stressful period, participants reported on their affect nine times a day and on daily positive and negative events for 10 days. Even during heightened stress, experiencing more positive events was associated with increased positive affect. The RewP significantly moderated this association: Individuals with a larger RewP reported greater increases in positive affect when they experienced more positive events, relative to individuals with a smaller RewP. A blunted RewP might contribute to stress susceptibility by affecting how much individuals engage in positive emotion regulation during stress. This study explores the association between reward sensitivity and risk for psychopathology. We examine how neural responses to rewards moderate the associations between positive and negative experiences and affect during a time of stress. By demonstrating that greater neural response to reward is related to greater positive affect following positive events, this study expands on factors that may buffer against the detrimental effects of stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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42. Reciprocal associations between affective decision-making and mental health in adolescence.
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Bentivegna, Francesca, Flouri, Eirini, and Papachristou, Efstathios
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RISK-taking behavior , *MENTAL health , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *TEENAGERS' conduct of life , *RESEARCH funding , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DECISION making in clinical medicine , *STATISTICAL models , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Poor affective decision-making has been shown to associate cross-sectionally with poor mental health in clinical populations. However, evidence from general population samples is scarce. Moreover, whether decision-making is prospectively linked to mental health in youth in the general population and whether such associations are reciprocal have yet to be examined. The present study examined bidirectional associations between various aspects of affective decision-making and emotional and behavioural problems at ages 11 and 14 years in 13,366 members of the Millennium Cohort Study. Decision-making (delay aversion, deliberation time, quality of decision-making, risk adjustment, risk-taking) and emotional (emotional symptoms, peer problems) and behavioural (conduct problems, hyperactivity/inattention) problems were measured using the Cambridge Gambling Task and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, respectively. Results of cross-lagged panel models adjusted for confounding revealed a negative reciprocal association between hyperactivity and quality of decision-making but also positive reciprocal associations between conduct problems and delay aversion, and between peer problems and deliberation time. Emotional problems and peer problems predicted a decrease in risk-taking, conduct problems predicted an increase in risk-taking, and hyperactivity predicted an increase in delay aversion and deliberation time. Furthermore, hyperactivity and conduct problems predicted less risk adjustment, and risk adjustment predicted fewer peer problems. The results suggest that behavioural problems are prospectively linked to greater risk-taking and lower risk adjustment in adolescence. Moreover, adolescents with behavioural problems tend to make poorer decisions and be more delay-averse, but also poorer quality of decision-making and increased delay aversion are associated with more behavioural problems over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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43. The Connection Between Eating Disorders and Substance Use Disorders
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Claudat, Kimberly, Simpson, Courtney C., Bohrer, Brittany K., Bongiornio, Gina M., Patel, Vinood B., editor, and Preedy, Victor R., editor
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- 2023
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44. Exploratory study of the prevalence of food addiction and its relationship with executive functioning, depression, and reinforcement sensitivity in a sample of Mexican adults
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Marybeth Alejandra Téllez-Rodríguez, Adriana Amaya-Hernández, Mayaro Ortega-Luyando, Carlos Alberto Serrano-Juárez, Guillermina Yáñez-Téllez, Verónica Elsa López-Alonso, Juan Manuel Mancilla-Diaz, and Rodrigo Erick Escartín-Pérez
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food addiction ,executive function ,depression ,binge eating ,reward sensitivity ,obesity ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
IntroductionThe study of food addiction (FA) has become relevant due to its high prevalence, the negative impact on quality of life, and its association with neuropsychological and psychiatric symptoms. Several studies have provided scientific support for these associations, however, the results are contradictory. Additionally, studies have unsuccessfully elucidated the true nature of the failures in executive functioning in people with FA symptomatology, particularly when it comes to executive deficits. Therefore, the purpose of this research was to establish whether the presence of executive dysfunction, depressive symptoms and binge eating problems, as well as high reward sensitivity entails a greater severity in FA traits and high body mass index (BMI) in a sample of Mexican adults.MethodsThe sample consisted of Mexican men and women between 21–59 years (n = 36); who completed self-report questionnaires and performance tests to measure the study variables. Additionally, BMI was estimated with self-reported height and weight.ResultsOur results showed that a high number of FA symptoms were associated with higher executive dysfunction scores, greater reward sensitivity, and more severe depressive and binge eating problems. Furthermore, factors that are more strongly associated with higher scores of FA include severe executive deficits, greater activation of the punishment avoidance system, and persistence in the search for reward when the depressive symptoms increased. The factors that best explained changes in the estimated BMI of women were a decreased crystallized intellectual capacity and the inability to control food intake as the number of FA symptoms increased.DiscussionIn summary, the cognitive functioning profile characterized by general failure of the executive functioning, as well as a greater activation of the Punishment Avoidance System and persistence in the search for reward, were associated with greater severity of FA symptoms, especially when the depressive symptomatology was severe. In parallel, the psychopathology in participants associated with FA confirms the contribution of anxious and depressive symptomatology and borderline personality traits which could facilitate the expression of clinically relevant FA symptoms in women. Finally, we found that decreased crystallized intellectual capacity and inability to control food intake were linked to higher BMI when the number of FA symptoms increased.
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- 2023
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45. Alexithymia, reward sensitivity and excessive exercise in non-binge-eaters versus severe binge eaters: Implications for primary and secondary exercise dependence.
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Lyvers, Michael, Truncali, Joseph, Stapleton, Peta, and Thorberg, Fred Arne
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INTEROCEPTION ,REWARD (Psychology) ,ALEXITHYMIA ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EMOTION regulation ,ALCOHOL drinking - Abstract
A distinction has been made between primary and secondary exercise dependence, with the latter defined as excessive exercise secondary to disordered eating and weight concerns. Based on theoretical considerations from research on the roles of trait factors in addictions, the present study used validated scales to assess alexithymia, sensitivity to reward and punishment, emotion regulation and interoception in relation to exercise dependence symptoms in Australian male and female non-binge eaters (n = 228) and severe binge eaters (n = 126) aged 18–30 yr. In both groups, exercise dependence symptoms were significantly positively associated with reward sensitivity and interoceptive awareness, with the latter two variables predicting exercise dependence symptoms in hierarchical regression models; punishment sensitivity was significantly negatively related to such symptoms. Alexithymia was significantly associated with exercise dependence symptoms only in non-binge eaters; in severe binge eaters, alexithymia explained 0% of unique variance. Male sex was associated with more exercise dependence symptoms in severe binge eaters only. Participants in the severe binge group scored significantly higher on measures of exercise dependence, alexithymia, risky alcohol use, and sensitivity to reward and punishment, and significantly lower on emotion regulation, compared to those in the non-binge group. Hierarchical regression models explained 25% of variance in exercise dependence symptoms in non-binge-eaters and 43% in severe binge eaters. Findings are discussed in terms of the distinction between primary and secondary exercise dependence, the role of alexithymia, study limitations including data collection during the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia, and suggestions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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46. Support from a Best Friend Makes People Eat Less under Stress: Evidence from Two Experiments.
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Xiao, Mingyue, Luo, Yijun, Zeng, Weiyu, and Chen, Hong
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When experiencing acute stress, individuals often turn to eating for comfort, as it provides a sense of satiety and satisfaction that can temporarily alleviate the stressful condition. However, this may increase the risk of obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease. In this study, we conducted two behavioral experiments to investigate the effectiveness of social support in reducing stress-induced overeating and the mediative role of negative affect and self-efficacy (Experiment 1), as well as the role of reward sensitivity (Experiment 2). Acute stress was induced using a speech preparation task and then participants were asked to regulate their emotions and cognition, either alone or with the help of pictures and supportive sentences provided by a best friend or stranger. Participants in Experiment 1 then completed the food choice task, and participants in Experiment 2 completed the food incentive delay task and the bogus tasting task. The results of both experiments consistently showed that participants who received support from their friends reported lower levels of perceived stress, chose fewer food portions, and consumed fewer snacks during acute stress, compared to the other three groups. Further mediation analysis using the process macro revealed that the differential influence of social support on the choice of high-calorie foods was due to decreased negative affect and increased self-efficacy. This study provides valuable insights for the development of therapeutic interventions for clinical eating disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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47. Transdiagnostic considerations of the relationship between reward sensitivity and psychopathological symptoms - a cross-lagged panel analysis.
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Potsch, L. and Rief, W.
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REWARD (Psychology) ,SOCIAL anxiety ,SOCIAL phobia ,PANEL analysis ,ALCOHOLISM ,EATING disorders ,MENTAL illness - Abstract
Background: Reward sensitivity constitutes a potential key mechanism regarding the etiology and maintenance of mental disorders, especially depression. However, due to a lack of longitudinal studies, the temporal dynamics are not clear yet. Although some evidence indicates that reward processing could be a transdiagnostic mechanism of disorders, these observations could be also a product of comorbidity with depression. This study aimed at investigating the temporal dynamics of reward sensitivity and the course of psychopathological symptoms in a longitudinal investigation, while taking a possible mediating role of depression into account. Methods: We conducted a three-wave longitudinal online survey with a 4-week interval. A total of N = 453 participants filled out all three questionnaires. Reward sensitivity was assessed with the Positive Valence System Scale-21 (PVSS-21), depression with the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), eating disorder symptoms with the Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire-8 (EDE-Q-8), social anxiety with the Mini-social phobia inventory (Mini-SPIN) and alcohol consumption with the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test-Consumption (AUDIT-C). Cross-lagged panels and mediation analyses were calculated using path analyses. Results: Depressive and eating disorder symptoms predicted reward insensitivity at later points in time. Effects were larger from T2 to T3. A bidirectional relationship concerning social anxiety was found. Higher alcohol consumption predicted higher reward sensitivity. Depression at T2 fully mediated the association between psychopathological symptoms at T1 and reward sensitivity at T3 for social anxiety and eating disorder symptoms. Conclusions: Our findings imply that reduced reward sensitivity seems to be a consequence rather than an antecedent of psychopathological symptoms. Comorbid depression plays a crucial role in other mental disorders regarding observed hyposensitivity towards rewards. Therefore, our results do not support a transdiagnostic notion of reward sensitivity, but they indicate a potential role of reward sensitivity for symptom persistence. Trial registration: The study was preregistered at the Open Science Framework (OSF) (https://archive.org/details/osf-registrations-6n3s8-v1; registration DOI https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/6N3S8). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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48. 抑郁倾向个体对社会和金钱奖励的敏感性: 奖励概率的作用.
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巴俊秀 and 王立君
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REWARD (Psychology) ,MONETARY incentives ,RENMINBI ,INCENTIVE (Psychology) ,DEPRESSED persons ,PERFORMANCE standards - Abstract
Copyright of Psychological Science is the property of Psychological Science Editorial Office and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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49. Aberrant functional connectivity between reward and inhibitory control networks in pre-adolescent binge eating disorder.
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Murray, Stuart B., Alba, Celina, Duval, Christina J., Nagata, Jason M., Cabeen, Ryan P., Lee, Darrin J., Toga, Arthur W., Siegel, Steven J., and Jann, Kay
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BRAIN physiology , *FOOD habits , *PREFRONTAL cortex , *BINGE-eating disorder , *NEUROPHYSIOLOGY , *ABERRANT crypt foci , *FUNCTIONAL connectivity , *CHILD behavior , *NEUROPLASTICITY , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *REWARD (Psychology) , *RESEARCH funding , *BODY mass index , *AMYGDALOID body - Abstract
Background: Behavioral features of binge eating disorder (BED) suggest abnormalities in reward and inhibitory control. Studies of adult populations suggest functional abnormalities in reward and inhibitory control networks. Despite behavioral markers often developing in children, the neurobiology of pediatric BED remains unstudied. Methods: 58 pre-adolescent children (aged 9–10-years) with BED (m BMI = 25.05; s.d. = 5.40) and 66 age, BMI and developmentally matched control children (m BMI = 25.78; s.d. = 0.33) were extracted from the 3.0 baseline (Year 0) release of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study. We investigated group differences in resting-state functional MRI functional connectivity (FC) within and between reward and inhibitory control networks. A seed-based approach was employed to assess nodes in the reward [orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), nucleus accumbens, amygdala] and inhibitory control [dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC)] networks via hypothesis-driven seed-to-seed analyses, and secondary seed-to-voxel analyses. Results: Findings revealed reduced FC between the dlPFC and amygdala, and between the ACC and OFC in pre-adolescent children with BED, relative to controls. These findings indicating aberrant connectivity between nodes of inhibitory control and reward networks were corroborated by the whole-brain FC analyses. Conclusions: Early-onset BED may be characterized by diffuse abnormalities in the functional synergy between reward and cognitive control networks, without perturbations within reward and inhibitory control networks, respectively. The decreased capacity to regulate a reward-driven pursuit of hedonic foods, which is characteristic of BED, may in part, rest on this dysconnectivity between reward and inhibitory control networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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50. Facets of impulsivity and reward in relation to binge‐eating disorder course of illness among children: findings from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study.
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Smith, Kathryn E., Wang, Wei‐Lin, and Mason, Tyler B.
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PERSONALITY , *BINGE-eating disorder , *IMPULSIVE personality , *BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *REWARD (Psychology) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *ODDS ratio , *BODY mass index , *SECONDARY analysis , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: The present study examined facets of impulsivity and reward sensitivity [as measured by the UPPS‐P Impulsive Behavior Scale and Behavioral Activation and Behavioral Inhibition Scales (BIS/BAS)] as multivariable predictors of subsequent binge‐eating disorder (BED) course of illness in middle childhood. Methods: The current sample included children aged 9–10 years (N = 9,438) who took part in the baseline and 1‐year follow‐up assessments of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study. BED course was operationalized as those who never developed BED or subthreshold BED (SBED) ('control'), were diagnosed with BED/SBED at year 1 but not baseline ('developers'), were diagnosed with BED/SBED at baseline but not year 1 ('remitters'), or were diagnosed with BED/SBED at both times ('maintainers'). Results: Higher baseline BIS/BAS reward responsivity scores were related to the greater likelihood of belonging to the maintainer group relative to the control and remitter groups (ORs1.12–1.19). Regarding covariates, higher baseline body mass index percentile and internalizing symptoms were related to the greater likelihood of BED development, remittance, and maintenance compared to the control group (ORs = 1.04–1.14); no variables were uniquely related to BED development. Exploratory analyses showed that the likelihood of belonging to the maintainer group compared to the control group was greatest at higher levels of negative urgency in combination with high reward responsivity. Conclusions: Heightened reward responsivity may convey risk for poorer BED course in children, while emotional disorder symptomatology may act as a more general risk and maintenance factor for BED. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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