Abstract

Humans are highly social beings, yet people with social anhedonia experience reduced interest in or reward from social situations. Social anhedonia is a key facet of schizotypal personality, an important symptom of schizophrenia, and increasingly recognized as an important feature in a range of other psychological disorders. However, to date, there has been little examination of the similarities and differences in social anhedonia across diagnostic borders. Here, our goal was to conduct a selective review of social anhedonia in different psychological and life course contexts, including the psychosis continuum, depressive disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, eating disorders, and autism spectrum disorders, along with developmental and neurobiological factors. Current evidence suggests that the nature and expression of social anhedonia vary across psychological disorders with some groups showing deficient learning about, enjoyment from, and anticipation of the pleasurable aspects of social interactions, while for others, some of these components appear to remain intact. However, study designs and methodologies are diverse, the roles of developmental and neurobiological factors are not routinely considered, and direct comparisons between diagnostic groups are rare—which prevents a more nuanced understanding of the underlying mechanisms involved. Future studies, parsing the wanting, liking, and learning components of social reward, will help to fill gaps in the current knowledge base. Consistent across disorders is diminished pleasure from social situations, subsequent withdrawal, and poorer social functioning in those who express social anhedonia. Nonetheless, feelings of loneliness often remain, which suggests the need for social connection is not entirely absent. Adolescence is a particularly important period of social and neural development and may provide a valuable window on the developmental origins of social anhedonia. Adaptive social functioning is key to recovery from mental health disorders; therefore, understanding the intricacies of social anhedonia will help to inform treatment and prevention strategies for a range of diagnostic categories.

Highlights

  • The need to belong is fundamental to human behavior, shaping our motivation for and maintenance of social relationships [1, 2]

  • The results showed that people with anorexia nervosa (AN) and bulimia nervosa (BN) have significantly higher scores on the Revised Social Anhedonia Scale than those without eating disorders [96,97,98], while those who had recovered from AN had intermediate levels of social anhedonia

  • Patient groups, regardless of diagnosis, report higher levels of social anhedonia compared to healthy controls, it needs to be noted that the psychosis continuum work highlights wide variation in social anhedonia scores in healthy volunteer samples

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Summary

Introduction

The need to belong is fundamental to human behavior, shaping our motivation for and maintenance of social relationships [1, 2]. Instances where individuals exhibit a reduced interest in and/ or pleasure from social engagement present a conundrum. Social anhedonia, a Transdiagnostic Perspective on Social Anhedonia trait-like disinterest in and lack of reward from social engagement [4,5,6,7], is attracting a resurgence of interest [8]. Social anhedonia stems from diminished positive affect from social contact, rather than heightened negative affect [9]. Social anhedonia is not an extreme form of introversion, which is characterized by low positive emotion and a preference for solitude [10]. Social anhedonia is not merely a reflection of diminished social interest, but at its core entails a reduced positive appraisal of all aspects of interpersonal relationships. Social anhedonia is a key element of schizotypy and schizophrenia [6, 12, 13], it is increasingly recognized transdiagnostically [14], spurring the development of a wide range of subjective (e.g., Table 1) and objective tools for its assessment

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