Abstract

In this longitudinal study of children and adolescents with a documented history of maltreatment, we investigated the impact of maltreatment on behavioral and neural indices of effort-based decision making for reward and examined their associations with future internalizing symptoms. Thirty-seven children with a documented history of maltreatment (MT group) and a carefully matched group of 33 non-maltreated children (NMT group) aged 10–16, completed an effort-based decision-making task during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Internalizing symptoms were assessed at baseline and again 18 months later. Computational models were implemented to extract individual estimates of reward and effort sensitivity, and neural signals during decision-making about different levels of reward and effort were analyzed. These were used to predict internalizing symptoms at follow-up. We identified lower effort-related activation in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), a prespecified region-of-interest, in the MT relative to the NMT group. No group differences were observed in the striatum, or in behavioral indices of reward and effort processing. Lower effort-related ACC activation significantly predicted elevated internalizing symptoms at follow-up in the MT group. These findings suggest that disrupted effort-related activation may index latent vulnerability to mental illness in children who have experienced maltreatment.

Highlights

  • Maltreatment experienced during childhood, such as neglect, physical, emotional, and sexual abuse is associated with a higher risk of poor mental health across a broad range of psychiatric disorders [1]

  • It has been proposed that certain brain systems adapt in ways that may confer immediate benefits in atypical environments associated with maltreatment, but which are poorly optimized for more normative environments [2]

  • A range of common mental health disorders associated with the experience of maltreatment—including depression, disruptive behavior disorders, and addiction—are characterized by atypical reward processing at both behavioral and neural levels [11,12,13]

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Summary

Introduction

Maltreatment experienced during childhood, such as neglect, physical, emotional, and sexual abuse is associated with a higher risk of poor mental health across a broad range of psychiatric disorders [1]. It has been proposed that certain brain systems adapt in ways that may confer immediate benefits in atypical environments associated with maltreatment, but which are poorly optimized for more normative environments [2] This may, over time, contribute to what has been conceptualized as “latent vulnerability” for a psychiatric disorder [2]. Converging evidence shows blunted reward anticipation and poorer ability to adapt behavior as a function of reward in depression, as well as lower neural activation in fronto-striatal circuitry [15], including the striatum and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) [16, 17] These alterations are more than correlates of concurrent illness, as they have been shown to predict the subsequent onset of symptoms in longitudinal work [18].

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