OBJECTIVE: Anhedonia, the lack of reactivity to pleasurable stimuli, is a cardinal feature of depression that has received renewed interest as a potential endophenotype of this debilitating disease. The goal of the present study was to test the hypothesis that individuals with major depression are characterized by blunted reward responsiveness, particularly when anhedonic symptoms are prominent. METHODS: A probabilistic reward task rooted within signal-detection theory was utilized to objectively assess hedonic capacity in 23 unmedicated subjects meeting DSM-IV criteria for major depressive disorder (MDD) and 25 matched control subjects recruited from the community. Hedonic capacity was defined as reward responsiveness - i.e., the participants' propensity to modulate behavior as a function of reward. RESULTS: Compared to controls, MDD subjects showed significantly reduced reward responsiveness. Trial-by-trial probability analyses revealed that MDD subjects, while responsive to delivery of single rewards, were impaired at integrating reinforcement history over time and expressing a response bias toward a more frequently rewarded cue in the absence of immediate reward. This selective impairment correlated with self-reported anhedonic symptoms, even after considering anxiety symptoms and general distress. CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that MDD is characterized by an impaired tendency to modulate behavior as a function of prior reinforcements, and provides initial clues about which aspects of hedonic processing might be dysfunctional in depression.
OBJECTIVE: Anhedonia, the lack of reactivity to pleasurable stimuli, is a cardinal feature of depression that has received renewed interest as a potential endophenotype of this debilitating disease. The goal of the present study was to test the hypothesis that individuals with major depression are characterized by blunted reward responsiveness, particularly when anhedonic symptoms are prominent. METHODS: A probabilistic reward task rooted within signal-detection theory was utilized to objectively assess hedonic capacity in 23 unmedicated subjects meeting DSM-IV criteria for major depressive disorder (MDD) and 25 matched control subjects recruited from the community. Hedonic capacity was defined as reward responsiveness - i.e., the participants' propensity to modulate behavior as a function of reward. RESULTS: Compared to controls, MDD subjects showed significantly reduced reward responsiveness. Trial-by-trial probability analyses revealed that MDD subjects, while responsive to delivery of single rewards, were impaired at integrating reinforcement history over time and expressing a response bias toward a more frequently rewarded cue in the absence of immediate reward. This selective impairment correlated with self-reported anhedonic symptoms, even after considering anxiety symptoms and general distress. CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that MDD is characterized by an impaired tendency to modulate behavior as a function of prior reinforcements, and provides initial clues about which aspects of hedonic processing might be dysfunctional in depression.
Authors: Emily K Olsen; Olivia A Bjorkquist; Anjuli S Bodapati; Stewart A Shankman; Ellen S Herbener Journal: Psychiatry Res Date: 2015-09-09 Impact factor: 3.222
Authors: Theodore D Satterthwaite; Joseph W Kable; Lillie Vandekar; Natalie Katchmar; Danielle S Bassett; Claudia F Baldassano; Kosha Ruparel; Mark A Elliott; Yvette I Sheline; Ruben C Gur; Raquel E Gur; Christos Davatzikos; Ellen Leibenluft; Michael E Thase; Daniel H Wolf Journal: Neuropsychopharmacology Date: 2015-03-13 Impact factor: 7.853
Authors: Minhae Kim; Ishtiaq Mawla; Daniel S Albrecht; Roee Admon; Angel Torrado-Carvajal; Courtney Bergan; Ekaterina Protsenko; Poornima Kumar; Robert R Edwards; Atreyi Saha; Vitaly Napadow; Diego A Pizzagalli; Marco L Loggia Journal: Neuroimage Date: 2020-02-15 Impact factor: 6.556