| Literature DB >> 33784324 |
Xin Song1, Iris Vilares1.
Abstract
The learned helplessness (LH) model is one of the most commonly used acute stress models to explain depression and it has shown good face and predictive validity. However, despite being able to induce depressed-like behaviors and corresponding psychophysiological changes, there is little evidence showing that the LH paradigm can produce anhedonia, a core symptom seen in all forms of depression in humans. So far a couple of studies showed that rodents bred for helplessness develop anhedonic-like behaviors in response to stress; yet, to the best of our knowledge, no similar human research has tried to investigate the direct relationship between the LH model and anhedonia. In the present study, we use a modified version of the original LH task to experimentally and temporarily induce learned helplessness in college students and then examine if the human LH paradigm induces anhedonia. We aim to 1: address the ill-defined connection between the LH model and anhedonia, and 2: directly assess helplessness in humans as opposed to the majority of non-human animal subjects used in the helplessness literature. We believe that our study will fill an important gap in the learned helplessness model literature, and will advance our understanding of the relationship between depression and perceived control, as well as place limitations to what can and cannot be inferred from non-human animal data in this topic.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33784324 PMCID: PMC8009390 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0249056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary table of our research questions, hypotheses, analysis plans, and predicted outcomes.
| Hypotheses | Statistical Analysis Plan | Predicted Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 1. The human learned-helplessness paradigm will induce learned-helplessness in human participants, evidenced by impaired escape learning in a new context. | To compare the average response latency of the 3 treatment groups across 6 blocks, a repeated measure, between factors ANOVA will be performed, with blocks as a within-subjects measure and treatment groups as a between-subjects measure. Post-hoc Scheffe tests will be performed in case of significant findings. | We predict that the result will align with our hypothesis that the participants from the yoked group, but not the master and control group, will show impaired escape learning in a new context. |
| 2. The human learned-helplessness paradigm will induce an increased anhedonic state in human participants, evidenced by decreased hedonic scores in the | To compare the average scores on the anhedonia surveys for the 3 treatment groups, a one-way, repeated measure ANOVA will be performed, with participants as within-subject factors and treatment groups as between-subject factors. Post-hoc Tukey tests will be performed in case of significant findings. | We predict that the result will align with our hypothesis, such that the participants from the yoked group, but not the master and control group, will have decreased hedonic scores in the |
| 3. The human learned-helplessness paradigm will induce an elevated anxiety state in human participants, evidenced by increased anxiety scores in the | To compare the average scores on the anhedonia surveys for the 3 treatment groups, a one-way, repeated measure ANOVA will be performed, with participants as within-subject factors and treatment groups as between-subject factors. Post-hoc Tukey tests will be performed in case of significant findings. | We predict that the result will align with our hypothesis, such that the participants from the yoked group, but not the master and control group, will have increased anxiety scores in the state anxiety survey |
| 4. The human LH paradigm will induce an anhedonic state in human participants, measured by reduced positive bias in the signal detection task. | To compare the mean response bias for the 3 treatment groups across 4 blocks, a repeated measure, between-factors ANOVA will be performed, with blocks as within-subjects measure and treatment groups as the between-subjects measure. Post hoc Newman-Keuls tests will be performed in case of significant findings. | We predict that the results will align with our hypothesis, such that the participants from the yoked group, but not the master and control group, will show reduced positive bias in the signal detection task. In addition, we expect a negative correlation between response latency and response bias, such that participants who have longer response latency will show more blunted response bias. |
| 1. The results we get from the signal detection task will be positively correlated with | To examine if the signal detection task correlates well with the anhedonia surveys, a Spearman correlation test will be performed. | We predict that there will be a positive correlation between the response bias and the scores in the anhedonia surveys, such that participants who show reduced response bias in the signal detection task will have lower hedonic scores in all of the |
| 2. The results we get from the | To examine if the anhedonia surveys correlate well with one another, a Spearman correlation test will be used. | We predict that there will be a positive correlation between the 2 |
| 1. Individuals who have higher scores on the | A Spearman correlation test will be performed to assess the correlation between the hedonic traits of participants and how fast they acquire learned helplessness. | We predict a positive correlation between anhedonic |
| 2. Individuals who have higher | A Spearman correlation test will be performed to assess the correlation between the anxiety traits of participants and how fast they acquire learned helplessness. | We predict a positive correlation between anxiety |
| Participants who have global attributional styles will show helplessness in both similar and new contexts; participants with a specific attributional style will only show helplessness in a similar context, but this helplessness may not transfer to a new context. | 3 Spearman correlation tests will be performed to assess the correlation between attributional styles and the average response latency in the LH task, the correlation between attributional styles and average anhedonic scores across different anhedonia surveys, and the correlation between attributional styles and average response bias in the SDT task. | If no main effects are found in the LH or the SDT task in any of the treatment groups, we think attributional styles may account for the lack of effects in any one or more of our measures. We predict participants who do not show helplessness would have a specific attributional style (vs a global attributional style). |
| We anticipate that the yoked participants will likely explore different strategies given their lack of control. This may manifest in more keypresses during any given trials, more escape sequences attempted, and a decline in key presses after a certain number of trials, etc. We will perform exploratory analyses on the above-mentioned measure to assess participants’ exploratory behaviors. | ||
Fig 1Schematic diagram of the LH task.
Top: the pre-treatment phase; button, the test phase. Pre-treatment: after the ISI (could be any length between 10~20 seconds, with an average of 15 seconds), a loud tone appears simultaneously with a cross in each square and participants can press the squares to make a response. The correct response to terminate the tone is pressing the left square and then the right square/or right square then left square, alternating sides between trials (e.g. if the correct sequence is left-right in any given trial, the correct sequence in the next trial would be right-left). Testing: the correct sequence is left-right-left or right-left-right, alternating across trials.
Fig 2Schematic diagram of the SDT task.
After a brief presentation of mouth in each trial, participants choose which type of stimulus they see by pressing either the “L” or the “S” key.