4.3 Article

Reliability and Validity of a Transdiagnostic Measure of Reward Valuation Effort

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
Volume 34, Issue 5, Pages 419-430

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/pas0001107

Keywords

eating disorders; reward value; progressive ratio task; behavior

Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) [R01 MH111263]
  2. Ford Foundation Fellowship
  3. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program [NSF 1449440]

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This study explores the use of a task adapted from animal-based research in humans, and finds that a task that allows individuals to work for access to play a game can produce scores that are applicable to understanding excessive consumption of food, alcohol, and other rewarding activities in future research.
To identify biobehavioral mechanisms underlying excessive reward consumption, reward valuation-effort (RV-E) assessments should (a) parallel measures in basic science to permit translation from preclinical to clinical studies; (b) quantify constructs dimensionally from healthy to disease states; and (c) hold relevance across different diagnostic categories. To address these aims, we developed a progressive ratio (PR) task whereby RV-E is measured as breakpoint when participants worked for access to playing a game. We evaluated test-retest reliability of breakpoint and convergent and discriminant validity of interpretations of this score against an established PR task for food. In Study 1, female undergraduates (N = 71; 33% racial minority; 28% ethnic minority) completed the game and food tasks in fasted and fed states. In Study 2, women (N = 189; 29% racial minority; 27% ethnic minority) with eating disorders (n = 158) were compared to controls (n = 31) on tasks. Game task breakpoint demonstrated excellent test-retest reliability, intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) = .91, 95% CI [.80, -.96], over 2 weeks and convergent validity with the fasted food task (r = .51, p < .001). Consistent with animal models, breakpoint was lower in fed compared to fasted states across tasks, B (SE) = 321.01 (552.40), p < .001. Finally, the game task demonstrated discriminant validity from measurement of satiation. In Study 2, women with eating disorders demonstrated higher breakpoint on both tasks compared to controls, and game PR task breakpoint decreased from a fasted to fed state. The game PR task offers a novel approach for translating results from animal models of RV-E into testable hypotheses in nonclinical and clinical samples. Public Significance Statement This study examines whether a measure used in animal-based research can be adapted for use in humans. Findings support that a task that allows people to work for access to play a game may produce scores that can be used in future research to understand what causes excessive consumption of food, alcohol, and other rewarding activities.

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