Depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity in a dual valence, magnitude learning task

<p><strong>Background.</strong> Learning from rewarded and punished choices is perturbed in depressed patients, suggesting that abnormal reinforcement learning may be a cognitive mechanism of the illness. However, previous studies have disagreed about whether this behavior is produ...

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Main Authors: Pulcu, E, Lin, W, Han, S, Browning, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2023
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author Pulcu, E
Lin, W
Han, S
Browning, M
author_facet Pulcu, E
Lin, W
Han, S
Browning, M
author_sort Pulcu, E
collection OXFORD
description <p><strong>Background.</strong> Learning from rewarded and punished choices is perturbed in depressed patients, suggesting that abnormal reinforcement learning may be a cognitive mechanism of the illness. However, previous studies have disagreed about whether this behavior is produced by alterations in the rate of learning or sensitivity to experienced outcomes. This previous work has generally assessed learning in response to binary outcomes of one valence, rather than to both rewarding and punishing continuous outcomes.</p> <p><strong>Methods.</strong> A novel drifting reward and punishment magnitude reinforcement-learning task was administered to patients with current (<i>n</i> = 40) and remitted depression (<i>n</i> = 39), and healthy volunteers (<i>n</i> = 40) to capture potential differences in learning behavior. Standard questionnaires were administered to measure self-reported depressive symptom severity, trait and state anxiety and level of anhedonic symptoms.</p> <p><strong>Results.</strong> Our findings demonstrate that patients with current depression adjust their learning behaviors to a lesser degree in response to trial-by-trial variations in reward and loss magnitudes than the other groups. Computational modeling revealed that this behavioral signature of current depressive state is better accounted for by reduced reward and punishment sensitivity (all <i>p</i> < 0.031), rather than a change in learning rate (<i>p</i> = 0.708). However, between-group differences were not related to self-reported symptom severity or comorbid anxiety disorders in the current depression group.</p> <p><strong>Conclusion.</strong> These findings suggest that current depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity rather than altered learning rate. Previous findings reported in this domain mainly from binary learning tasks seem to generalize to learning from continuous outcomes.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:0eee2bf5-2615-41a4-be6a-0d7bb1af933e2024-05-07T11:34:24ZDepression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity in a dual valence, magnitude learning taskJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:0eee2bf5-2615-41a4-be6a-0d7bb1af933eEnglishSymplectic ElementsCambridge University Press 2023Pulcu, ELin, WHan, SBrowning, M<p><strong>Background.</strong> Learning from rewarded and punished choices is perturbed in depressed patients, suggesting that abnormal reinforcement learning may be a cognitive mechanism of the illness. However, previous studies have disagreed about whether this behavior is produced by alterations in the rate of learning or sensitivity to experienced outcomes. This previous work has generally assessed learning in response to binary outcomes of one valence, rather than to both rewarding and punishing continuous outcomes.</p> <p><strong>Methods.</strong> A novel drifting reward and punishment magnitude reinforcement-learning task was administered to patients with current (<i>n</i> = 40) and remitted depression (<i>n</i> = 39), and healthy volunteers (<i>n</i> = 40) to capture potential differences in learning behavior. Standard questionnaires were administered to measure self-reported depressive symptom severity, trait and state anxiety and level of anhedonic symptoms.</p> <p><strong>Results.</strong> Our findings demonstrate that patients with current depression adjust their learning behaviors to a lesser degree in response to trial-by-trial variations in reward and loss magnitudes than the other groups. Computational modeling revealed that this behavioral signature of current depressive state is better accounted for by reduced reward and punishment sensitivity (all <i>p</i> < 0.031), rather than a change in learning rate (<i>p</i> = 0.708). However, between-group differences were not related to self-reported symptom severity or comorbid anxiety disorders in the current depression group.</p> <p><strong>Conclusion.</strong> These findings suggest that current depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity rather than altered learning rate. Previous findings reported in this domain mainly from binary learning tasks seem to generalize to learning from continuous outcomes.</p>
spellingShingle Pulcu, E
Lin, W
Han, S
Browning, M
Depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity in a dual valence, magnitude learning task
title Depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity in a dual valence, magnitude learning task
title_full Depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity in a dual valence, magnitude learning task
title_fullStr Depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity in a dual valence, magnitude learning task
title_full_unstemmed Depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity in a dual valence, magnitude learning task
title_short Depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity in a dual valence, magnitude learning task
title_sort depression is associated with reduced outcome sensitivity in a dual valence magnitude learning task
work_keys_str_mv AT pulcue depressionisassociatedwithreducedoutcomesensitivityinadualvalencemagnitudelearningtask
AT linw depressionisassociatedwithreducedoutcomesensitivityinadualvalencemagnitudelearningtask
AT hans depressionisassociatedwithreducedoutcomesensitivityinadualvalencemagnitudelearningtask
AT browningm depressionisassociatedwithreducedoutcomesensitivityinadualvalencemagnitudelearningtask