Abstract

We report on the ongoing R21 project “Social Reward Learning in Schizophrenia”. Impairments in social cognition are a hallmark of schizophrenia. However, little work has been done on social reward learning deficits in schizophrenia. The overall goal of the project is to assess social reward learning in schizophrenia. A probabilistic reward learning (PRL) task is being used in the MRI scanner to evaluate reward learning to negative and positive social feedback. Monetary reward learning is used as a comparison to assess specificity. Behavioral outcomes and brain areas, included those involved in reward, are assessed in patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder and controls. It is also critical to determine whether decreased expected value (EV) of social stimuli and/or reward prediction error (RPE) learning underlie social reward learning deficits to inform potential treatment pathways. Our central hypothesis is that the pattern of social learning deficits is an extension of a more general reward learning impairment in schizophrenia and that social reward learning deficits critically contribute to deficits in social motivation and pleasure. We hypothesize that people with schizophrenia will show impaired behavioral social reward learning compared to controls, as well as decreased ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) EV signaling at time of choice and decreased striatal RPE signaling at time of outcome, with potentially greater impairment to positive than negative feedback. The grant is in its second year. It is hoped that this innovative approach may lead to novel and more targeted treatment approaches for social cognitive impairments, using cognitive remediation and/or brain stimulation.

Highlights

  • We report on the ongoing R21 project “Social Reward Learning in Schizophrenia”

  • In parallel social and monetary probabilistic reward learning (PRL) tasks [14,33], similar areas were activated in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) modulated by expected value (EV) at time of choice and in the striatum modulated by reward prediction error (RPE) at time of outcome

  • A number of other brain areas are involved in social cognition and social reward learning, including the amygdala, which responds to the emotional valence of stimuli, including faces [1,35,36,37]

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Summary

Introduction

We report on the ongoing R21 project “Social Reward Learning in Schizophrenia”. Impairments in social cognition are a hallmark of schizophrenia. In parallel social and monetary probabilistic reward learning (PRL) tasks [14,33], similar areas were activated in the vmPFC modulated by EV at time of choice and in the striatum modulated by RPE at time of outcome These parallel tasks are being used in the present study. Altered amygdala functioning in schizophrenia [1,35,36,38,39] may be involved in social reward learning deficits, as this area projects to the striatum and PFC, such that decreased amygdala responses to the valence of social stimuli could affect RPE learning as well as the valuation of stimuli (Figure 1). Fett et al [17] found aberrant caudate and right temporoparietal junction (TPJ) responses in people with schizophrenia in a trust game that involved elements of social reward (e.g., learning the intentions of others)

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