Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Multivariate Neural Patterns of Reward and Anxiety in Adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa

View through CrossRef
People with anorexia nervosa (AN) commonly exhibit elevated anxiety and atypical reward responsiveness. To examine multivariate neural patterns associated with reward and the impact of anxiety on reward, we analyzed fMRI data from a monetary reward task using representational similarity analysis, a multivariate approach that measures trial by trial consistency of neural responses. Twenty-five adolescent girls with AN and 22 mildly anxious controls lacking any history of AN were presented personalized anxiety-provoking or neutral words before receiving a reward, and neural response patterns in reward regions were analyzed. Consistent with our preregistered hypothesis, AN participants showed lower representational similarity than controls during neutral-word rewarded trials. Within groups, controls showed significant representational similarity in reward circuit regions including the left nucleus accumbens, left basolateral amygdala, and left medial orbitofrontal cortex, which were not observed in AN. Further, reward-related prefrontal cognitive control areas - left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex - showed significant representational similarity in both groups, but a larger spatial extent in controls. Contrary to predictions, there were no significant between-group differences for the effects of anxiety-words on reward representational similarity, and representational similarity did not predict longitudinal symptom change over six months. Overall, the results demonstrate relatively inconsistent trial-by-trial responses to reward receipt in the neutral state in AN compared with controls in both reward circuit and cognitive control regions, but no significant differential effects of anxiety states on reward responses. These results add to dynamic understandings of reward processing in AN that have potential implications for planning and guiding reward-focused interventions.
Title: Multivariate Neural Patterns of Reward and Anxiety in Adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa
Description:
People with anorexia nervosa (AN) commonly exhibit elevated anxiety and atypical reward responsiveness.
To examine multivariate neural patterns associated with reward and the impact of anxiety on reward, we analyzed fMRI data from a monetary reward task using representational similarity analysis, a multivariate approach that measures trial by trial consistency of neural responses.
Twenty-five adolescent girls with AN and 22 mildly anxious controls lacking any history of AN were presented personalized anxiety-provoking or neutral words before receiving a reward, and neural response patterns in reward regions were analyzed.
Consistent with our preregistered hypothesis, AN participants showed lower representational similarity than controls during neutral-word rewarded trials.
Within groups, controls showed significant representational similarity in reward circuit regions including the left nucleus accumbens, left basolateral amygdala, and left medial orbitofrontal cortex, which were not observed in AN.
Further, reward-related prefrontal cognitive control areas - left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex - showed significant representational similarity in both groups, but a larger spatial extent in controls.
Contrary to predictions, there were no significant between-group differences for the effects of anxiety-words on reward representational similarity, and representational similarity did not predict longitudinal symptom change over six months.
Overall, the results demonstrate relatively inconsistent trial-by-trial responses to reward receipt in the neutral state in AN compared with controls in both reward circuit and cognitive control regions, but no significant differential effects of anxiety states on reward responses.
These results add to dynamic understandings of reward processing in AN that have potential implications for planning and guiding reward-focused interventions.

Related Results

An examination of how reward associations differentially facilitate and impair Stroop performance
An examination of how reward associations differentially facilitate and impair Stroop performance
Behavioral performance is improved when the color of a Stroop stimulus is tied to a potential reward but is impaired when the irrelevant word meaning is reward related. The facilit...
Reward does not facilitate visual perceptual learning until sleep occurs
Reward does not facilitate visual perceptual learning until sleep occurs
ABSTRACTA growing body of evidence indicates that visual perceptual learning (VPL) is enhanced by reward provided during training. Another line of studies has shown that sleep foll...
An examination of how reward associations facilitate and impair Stroop performance
An examination of how reward associations facilitate and impair Stroop performance
Rewarded stimuli are prioritized by the attentional system. Behavioral performance is improved when the task-relevant dimension is tied to a potential reward but is impaired when t...
Anorexia Nervosa: Opportunities and Challenges in Treatment
Anorexia Nervosa: Opportunities and Challenges in Treatment
Anorexia nervosa is an eating disorder condition characterized by an abnormal fear of gaining weight, driving people to starve themselves and become dangerously thin. It involves r...
Disturbances in the experiences of embodiment related to attachment, mentalization and self-objectification in anorexia nervosa
Disturbances in the experiences of embodiment related to attachment, mentalization and self-objectification in anorexia nervosa
AbstractBackgroundBody image disturbance is central to both the understanding and treatment of anorexia nervosa (AN); however, the underlying psychological processes involved are s...
Differential and temporally dynamic involvement of primate amygdala nuclei in face animacy and reward information processing
Differential and temporally dynamic involvement of primate amygdala nuclei in face animacy and reward information processing
Abstract Decision-making is influenced by both expected reward and social factors, such as who offered the outcomes. Thus, although a reward might originally be ind...
Hubungan Psikososial dan Status Gizi pada Remaja Wanita dengan Anoreksia Nervosa
Hubungan Psikososial dan Status Gizi pada Remaja Wanita dengan Anoreksia Nervosa
Latar Belakang: Kejadian anoreksia nervosa dapat berisiko dengan masalah gizi yang serius di masa depan. Faktor psikososial salah satu penyebab terjadinya anoreksia nervosa. Fase r...

Back to Top