Abstract

Depression is characterized by a marked decrease in social interactions and blunted sensitivity to rewards. Surprisingly, despite the importance of social deficits in depression, non-social aspects have been disproportionally investigated. As a consequence, the cognitive mechanisms underlying atypical decision-making in social contexts in depression are poorly understood. In the present study, we investigate whether deficits in reward processing interact with the social context and how this interaction is affected by self-reported depression and anxiety symptoms in the general population. Two cohorts of subjects (discovery and replication sample: N = 50 each) took part in an experiment involving reward learning in contexts with different levels of social information (absent, partial and complete). Behavioral analyses revealed a specific detrimental effect of depressive symptoms–but not anxiety–on behavioral performance in the presence of social information, i.e. when participants were informed about the choices of another player. Model-based analyses further characterized the computational nature of this deficit as a negative audience effect, rather than a deficit in the way others’ choices and rewards are integrated in decision making. To conclude, our results shed light on the cognitive and computational mechanisms underlying the interaction between social cognition, reward learning and decision-making in depressive disorders.

Highlights

  • One of the core clinical symptoms of depression is anhedonia, which refers to a reduced motivation to engage in daily life activities and a reduced enjoyment of usually enjoyable activities [1, 2]

  • We measured the influence of self-reported depressive symptoms on social learning in participants performing an online experiment

  • Our study shows that depressive symptoms are associated with decreased performance only when participants are informed about the actions of another player

Read more

Summary

Introduction

One of the core clinical symptoms of depression is anhedonia, which refers to a reduced motivation to engage in daily life activities (motivational anhedonia) and a reduced enjoyment of usually enjoyable activities (consummatory anhedonia) [1, 2]. In principle, this clinical manifestation could be explained by reduced reward sensitivity, both in terms of incentive motivation and in terms of reinforcement processes [3,4,5]. Our goal was to investigate whether the reward-learning deficit that is often associated with elevated depressive symptoms interacts with the social context [12]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call