| Literature DB >> 29423135 |
Gregor Kohls1, Ligia Antezana2, Maya G Mosner3, Robert T Schultz4,5,6, Benjamin E Yerys4,6.
Abstract
Background: Neurobiological research in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) has paid little attention on brain mechanisms that cause and maintain restricted and repetitive behaviors and interests (RRBIs). Evidence indicates an imbalance in the brain's reward system responsiveness to social and non-social stimuli may contribute to both social deficits and RRBIs. Thus, this study's central aim was to compare brain responsiveness to individual RRBI (i.e., circumscribed interests), with social rewards (i.e., social approval), in youth with ASD relative to typically developing controls (TDCs).Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorders; Caudate nucleus; Circumscribed interests; Functional magnetic resonance imaging; Motivation; Restricted and repetitive behaviors and interests; Reward; Reward system; Striatum
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29423135 PMCID: PMC5791309 DOI: 10.1186/s13229-018-0195-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Summary of participant characteristics by diagnostic group
| Measure | TDC | ASD | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 12.85 (2.13) | 12.58 (2.37) | 0.66 |
| Age range | 9.08–17.00 | 8.17–17.58 | |
| VIQ (SS) | 113.5 (15.4) | 105.6 (14.4) | 0.06 |
| PIQ (SS) | 109.2 (16.2) | 101.9 (16.5) | 0.10 |
| FSIQ (SS) | 111.9 (18.0) | 103.6 (15.7) | 0.08 |
| Sex ratio (male:female) | 17:5 | 29:10 | 0.80 |
| ADOS-2 social affect + RRB | – | 11.62 (3.89) | – |
| ADOS-2 severity | – | 6.87 (0.32) | – |
| ADI-R social Interaction | – | 18.39 (5.20) | – |
| ADI-R communication | – | 14.61 (4.87) | – |
| ADI-R repetitive behaviors | – | 6.03 (2.09) | – |
| RBS-R (total score) | – | 17.87 (11.88) | – |
| SRS-2 (total | 39.5 (4.87) | 73.41 (10.71) | < 0.001 |
| IS (total score) | 9.53 (2.41) | 14.2 (3.76) | < 0.001 |
VIQ verbal IQ, PIQ performance/nonverbal IQ, FSIQ full-scale IQ, SS standard score (M = 100; SD = 15), SRS-2 Social Responsiveness Scale—2nd Edition, ADOS-2 Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule Module 3 or 4, ADI-R Autism Diagnostic Interview—Revised, RBS-R Repetitive Behavior Scale-Revised, IS Interests Scale
*p values are based on two-sample t tests and χ test (for sex ratio)
Fig. 1Illustration of the incentive delay task in a blocked fMRI design, including three different reward conditions: social reward (SR), interest reward (IR), and neutral (NR). To increase the ecological validity of the paradigm, static photos were replaced with short video clips (see text for more details)
Main performance variables of the incentive delay task by group and incentive condition
| TDC | ASD | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| RT for hits (in ms) | |||
| Neutral | 255.3 (29.8) | 250.9 (27.7) | 0.56 |
| Social reward | 206.7 (22.4) | 200.7 (20.0) | 0.29 |
| Interest reward | 242.4 (23.9) | 238.4 (28.3) | 0.58 |
| Accuracy (in %): | |||
| Neutral | 49.5 (11.7) | 47.7 (9.9) | 0.53 |
| Social reward | 56.9 (9.9) | 54.8 (6.7) | 0.32 |
| Interest reward | 45.1 (11.6) | 45.7 (7.6) | 0.83 |
*p values are based on two-sample t tests
Fig. 2Z-statistic activation maps depict reward system activation across the entire sample separately for the two high-level contrasts social reward > neutral outcome (hot colors) and interest reward > neutral outcome (cool colors). Both social reward and interest reward (versus neutral outcome) strongly activated a widespread reward system, comprising ventral and dorsal striatum, thalamus, amygdala, medial prefrontal areas (ACC, vmPFC) as well as clusters with orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and anterior insula. Maps were thresholded using clusters determined by a voxel-level of p ≤ 0.001 and an FWE-corrected cluster-significance threshold of p ≤ 0.05. Color bars indicate Z-scores
Fig. 3ROI analyses revealed a significant group-by-reward type interaction effect in the caudate nucleus with greater dorsal striatum activation for interest reward (IR) than social reward (SR) in youth with ASD, while TDCs did not show significant differences—although a reverse direction—in their response pattern to both reward types. Bar graphs depict mean β values from the bilateral caudate cluster identified by the significant interaction effect. The ROI was anatomically defined based on the Harvard-Oxford structural probabilistic atlas. Results are FEW corrected at p ≤ 0.05 across this particular region. Color bar indicates t-statistics
Fig. 4The magnitude of caudate activation that distinguished the two groups correlated positively with ASD symptom severity as assessed by the SRS-2 social communication and interaction sub-score (for the ASD group only). The stronger the caudate activation for personalized interest reward vs. social reward the greater the social impairment in the ASD group