Abstract

Alterations in reinforcement-based decision making may be associated with increased psychiatric vulnerability in children who have experienced maltreatment. A probabilistic passive avoidance task and a model-based functional magnetic resonance imaging analytic approach were implemented to assess the neurocomputational components underlying decision making: (a) reinforcement expectancies (the representation of the outcomes associated with a stimulus) and (b) prediction error signaling (the ability to detect the differences between expected and actual outcomes). There were three main findings. First, the maltreated group (n = 18; mean age = 13), relative to nonmaltreated peers (n = 19; mean age = 13), showed decreased activity during expected value processing in a widespread network commonly associated with reinforcement expectancies representation, including the striatum (especially the caudate), the orbitofrontal cortex, and medial temporal structures including the hippocampus and insula. Second, consistent with previously reported hyperresponsiveness to negative cues in the context of childhood abuse, the maltreated group showed increased prediction error signaling in the middle cingulate gyrus, somatosensory cortex, superior temporal gyrus, and thalamus. Third, the maltreated group showed increased activity in frontodorsal regions and in the putamen during expected value representation. These findings suggest that early adverse environments disrupt the development of decision-making processes, which in turn may compromise psychosocial functioning in ways that increase latent vulnerability to psychiatric disorder.

Highlights

  • Alterations in reinforcement-based decision making may be associated with increased psychiatric vulnerability in children who have experienced maltreatment

  • Childhood maltreatment leads to alterations in several neurobiological and cognitive systems, which are understood as developmental recalibrations to abusive and neglectful environments

  • It was found that while the blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) response by expected value (EV) in this frontodorsal cluster during both approach and avoidance trials was significantly correlated with omission errors (r 1⁄4 –.64, p 1⁄4 .002 and r 1⁄4 –.43, p 1⁄4 .04, respectively), that was not the case for the commission errors (r 1⁄4 –.15, p 1⁄4 .28 and r 1⁄4 –.26, p 1⁄4 .15, respectively). This is the first study to investigate the extent to which children with documented experiences of childhood maltreatment show alterations in the neural systems engaged with specific computations of reinforcement-based decision making

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Summary

Introduction

Alterations in reinforcement-based decision making may be associated with increased psychiatric vulnerability in children who have experienced maltreatment. The maltreated group showed increased activity in frontodorsal regions and in the putamen during expected value representation These findings suggest that early adverse environments disrupt the development of decision-making processes, which in turn may compromise psychosocial functioning in ways that increase latent vulnerability to psychiatric disorder. The theory of latent vulnerability (McCrory & Viding, 2015; McCrory, Gerin, & Viding, 2017) offers a systems-level approach that places emphasis on the neurocognitive mechanisms that link early adversity to future psychopathology According to this account, childhood maltreatment leads to alterations in several neurobiological and cognitive systems, which are understood as developmental recalibrations to abusive and neglectful environments. In the longterm, they come at a cost as they heighten psychiatric risk

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