Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Sex differences in externalizing and internalizing traits and ventral striatal responses to monetary loss
View through CrossRef
AbstractVentral striatum (VS) processes rewarding and punishing stimuli. Women and men vary in externalizing and internalizing traits, which may influence neural responses to reward and punishment. To investigate sex differences in how individual traits influence VS responses to reward and punishment, we curated the data of the Human Connectome Project and identified 981 (473 men) subjects evaluated by the Achenbach Adult Self-Report Syndrome Scales. We processed the imaging data with published routines and extracted VS reactivity (β) to win and to loss vs. baseline in a gambling task for correlation with externalizing and internalizing symptom severity. Men vs. women showed more severe externalizing symptoms and higher VS response to monetary losses (VS-loss β) but not to wins. Men but not women showed a significant, positive correlation between VS-loss β and externalizing traits, and the sex difference was confirmed by a slope test. The correlation each of VS-loss and VS-win β vs. externalizing traits and of VS-loss β each vs. internalizing and vs. externalizing traits differed significantly in slope, confirming its specificity, in men. Further, the sex-specific relationship between VS-loss β and externalizing trait did not extend to activities during exposure to negative emotion in the face matching task. To conclude, VS responses to loss but not to win and their correlation with externalizing rather than internalizing symptom severity showed sex differences in young adults. The findings highlight the relationship of externalizing traits and VS reactivity to monetary loss and may have implications for psychological models of externalizing behaviors in men.
Research Square Platform LLC
Title: Sex differences in externalizing and internalizing traits and ventral striatal responses to monetary loss
Description:
AbstractVentral striatum (VS) processes rewarding and punishing stimuli.
Women and men vary in externalizing and internalizing traits, which may influence neural responses to reward and punishment.
To investigate sex differences in how individual traits influence VS responses to reward and punishment, we curated the data of the Human Connectome Project and identified 981 (473 men) subjects evaluated by the Achenbach Adult Self-Report Syndrome Scales.
We processed the imaging data with published routines and extracted VS reactivity (β) to win and to loss vs.
baseline in a gambling task for correlation with externalizing and internalizing symptom severity.
Men vs.
women showed more severe externalizing symptoms and higher VS response to monetary losses (VS-loss β) but not to wins.
Men but not women showed a significant, positive correlation between VS-loss β and externalizing traits, and the sex difference was confirmed by a slope test.
The correlation each of VS-loss and VS-win β vs.
externalizing traits and of VS-loss β each vs.
internalizing and vs.
externalizing traits differed significantly in slope, confirming its specificity, in men.
Further, the sex-specific relationship between VS-loss β and externalizing trait did not extend to activities during exposure to negative emotion in the face matching task.
To conclude, VS responses to loss but not to win and their correlation with externalizing rather than internalizing symptom severity showed sex differences in young adults.
The findings highlight the relationship of externalizing traits and VS reactivity to monetary loss and may have implications for psychological models of externalizing behaviors in men.
Related Results
Are Danish adolescents’ internalizing and externalizing symptoms associated with their substance use?
Are Danish adolescents’ internalizing and externalizing symptoms associated with their substance use?
Abstract
Background
Several studies have found that externalizing symptoms are associated with harmful substance use. Also, find...
Functional autapses form in striatal parvalbumin interneurons but not medium spiny neurons
Functional autapses form in striatal parvalbumin interneurons but not medium spiny neurons
Abstract
Autapses (or self-synapses) selectively form in specific cell types in many brain regions including the neocortex and the hippocampus, w...
Gender differences in externalizing and internalizing problems in Singaporean children and adolescents with attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder
Gender differences in externalizing and internalizing problems in Singaporean children and adolescents with attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder
Abstract
Background: Studies on gender differences in attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) comorbidities in the Asian populations have been limited and previous...
Parenting styles and externalizing problem behaviors of preschoolers: mediation through self-control abilities and emotional management skills
Parenting styles and externalizing problem behaviors of preschoolers: mediation through self-control abilities and emotional management skills
IntroductionThe detection rate of externalizing problem behaviors among Chinese children has been increasing year by year. Before the age of six, the problem behaviors that appear ...
Cortico-striatal action control inherent of opponent cognitive-motivational styles
Cortico-striatal action control inherent of opponent cognitive-motivational styles
Abstract
Turning on cue or stopping at a red light requires attending to such cues to select action sequences, or suppress action, in accordance with learned cue-as...
Interplay between periodic stimulation and GABAergic inhibition in striatal network oscillations
Interplay between periodic stimulation and GABAergic inhibition in striatal network oscillations
AbstractThe network oscillations are ubiquitous across many brain regions. In the basal ganglia, oscillations are also present at many levels and a wide range of characteristic fre...
Prevalence and correlates of internalizing and externalizing mental health problems among in-school adolescents in eastern Ethiopia: a cross-sectional study
Prevalence and correlates of internalizing and externalizing mental health problems among in-school adolescents in eastern Ethiopia: a cross-sectional study
AbstractAdolescent’s mental health issues are a major social burden and a significant public health issue, but they have not received enough attention in Ethiopia. Therefore, this ...
Substance use and common child mental health problems: examining longitudinal associations in a British sample
Substance use and common child mental health problems: examining longitudinal associations in a British sample
ABSTRACTAims To examine the longitudinal associations in both directions between mental health and substance use in adolescence.Design Three‐year longitudinal cohort.Setting Bri...

