4.4 Article

Negative and depressive symptoms differentially relate to real-world anticipatory and consummatory pleasure in schizophrenia

Journal

SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH
Volume 241, Issue -, Pages 72-77

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2022.01.012

Keywords

Schizophrenia; Anticipatory pleasure; Consummatory pleasure; Depression; Anhedonia; Ecological momentary assessment

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The study suggests that negative symptoms in schizophrenia are linked to reduced anticipatory pleasure, while depressive symptoms are associated with reductions in both anticipatory and consummatory pleasure. It is important to consider the severity of both types of symptoms in understanding pleasure in schizophrenia.
It has been suggested that schizophrenia is associated with deficits in anticipatory but not consummatory pleasure, though there is mixed support for this hypothesis. As individuals with schizophrenia can experience both negative and depressive symptoms, symptom heterogeneity in this population could contribute to these mixed hedonic findings. Specifically, while some research suggests that negative symptoms of schizophrenia are related to reduced anticipatory but not consummatory pleasure, research on major depressive disorder suggests that depressive symptoms are associated with both decreased anticipatory and consummatory pleasure. Still, it is unclear whether depressive symptoms are associated with experiences of pleasure in schizophrenia as they are in major depressive disorder. Thus, the present study used Ecological Momentary Assessment (four prompts per day over one week) to investigate the unique relationships of negative and depressive symptoms with daily reports of real-world anticipatory and consummatory pleasure in 63 individuals with schizophrenia. Higher negative symptoms related to reduced anticipatory but not consummatory pleasure. On the other hand, higher depressive symptoms related to reductions in both anticipatory and consummatory pleasure. Overall, these results indicate that negative and depressive symptoms are differentially associated with hedonic experience in schizophrenia, and suggest the need to account for the severity of both these symptom types when examining pleasure in this population. Elucidating the nature of these symptom contributions to hedonic impairments could increase causal understanding of these deficits and contribute to the development of more targeted treatments to enhance motivation and pleasure in schizophrenia.

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