4.5 Article

Neural function underlying reward expectancy and attainment in adolescents with diverse psychiatric symptoms

期刊

NEUROIMAGE-CLINICAL
卷 36, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.nicl.2022.103258

关键词

Reward expectancy; Reward attainment; Adolescence; fMRI; Depression; Anxiety

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01MH120601, R01MH126821, R01DA054885, R01MH128878, R21MH121920, R21MH126501]
  2. Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
  3. ISMMS Brain Imaging Center

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Reward dysfunction plays a key role in the development of psychiatric conditions in adolescence. A study using the Reward Flanker fMRI Task found that reward expectancy activates certain brain regions, while reward attainment leads to deactivation in these regions. Additionally, reward expectancy activation is negatively correlated with anxiety severity, while reward attainment activation is positively correlated with both anxiety and depression severity.
Reward dysfunction has been hypothesized to play a key role in the development of psychiatric conditions during adolescence. To help capture the complexity of reward function in youth, we used the Reward Flanker fMRI Task, which enabled us to examine neural activity during expectancy and attainment of both certain and uncertain rewards. Participants were 84 psychotropic-medication-free adolescents, including 67 with diverse psychiatric conditions and 17 healthy controls. Functional MRI used high-resolution acquisition and high-fidelity processing techniques modeled after the Human Connectome Project. Analyses examined neural activation during reward expectancy and attainment, and their associations with clinical measures of depression, anxiety, and anhedonia severity, with results controlled for family-wise errors using non-parametric permutation tests. As anticipated, reward expectancy activated regions within the fronto-striatal reward network, thalamus, occipital lobe, superior parietal lobule, temporoparietal junction, and cerebellum. Unexpectedly, however, reward attainment was marked by widespread deactivation in many of these same regions, which we further explored using cosine similarity analysis. Across all subjects, striatum and thalamus activation during reward expectancy negatively correlated with anxiety severity, while activation in numerous cortical and subcortical regions during reward attainment positively correlated with both anxiety and depression severity. These findings highlight the complexity and dynamic nature of neural reward processing in youth.

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