4.7 Article

Amygdala-prefrontal connectivity modulates loss aversion bias in anxious individuals

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 218, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.116957

Keywords

Trait anxiety; Decision making; Loss aversion; Risk aversion; Amygdala; Prefrontal cortex

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31920103009, 31530031, 31871137, 31700959, 31671133, 31500920]
  2. Young Elite Scientists Sponsorship Program by China Association for Science and Technology (2018)
  3. Guangdong International Scientific Collaboration Project [2019A050510048]
  4. Guangdong Key Basic Research Grant [2018B030332001]
  5. Guangdong Young Innovative Talent Project [2016KQNCX149]
  6. Guangdong University Innovation Team Project [2015KCXTD009]
  7. Guangdong Basic and Applied Research Major Project [2016KZDXM009]
  8. Guangdong Pearl River Talents Plan Innovative and Entrepreneurial Team grant [2016ZT06S220]
  9. Shenzhen Science and Technology Research Program [JCYJ20180507183500566, JCYJ20150729104249783, JCYJ20170412164413575]
  10. Shenzhen Peacock Program [827000235, KQTD2015033016104926]
  11. VENI grant (NWO) [016.156.077]
  12. Shenzhen-Hong Kong Institute of Brain ScienceShenzhen Fundamental Research Institutions [2019SHIBS0003]

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Anxious individuals tend to make pessimistic judgments in decision making under uncertainty. While this phenomenon is commonly attributed to risk aversion, loss aversion is a critical but often overlooked factor. In this study, we simultaneously examined risk aversion and loss aversion during decision making in high and low trait anxious individuals in a variable gain/loss gambling task during functional magnetic resonance imaging. Although high relative to low anxious individuals showed significant increased risk aversive behavior reflected by decreased overall gamble decisions, there was no group difference in subjective aversion to risk. Instead, loss aversion rather than risk aversion dominantly contributed to predict behavioral decisions, which was associated with attenuated functional connectivity between the amygdala-based emotional system and the prefrontal control regions. Our findings suggest a dominant role of loss aversion in maladaptive risk assessment of anxious individuals, underpinned by disorganization of emotion-related and cognitive-control-related brain networks.

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