Abstract

This study examined whether adolescents with anorexia nervosa (AN) are more sensitive to punishment and less sensitive to reward than a non-eating disorder comparison group. Both self-report and performance measures were used to index reward and punishment sensitivity. Participants were adolescents with AN (n = 69) and an individually matched comparison group with healthy weight (n = 69). They completed the Behavioral Inhibition Scale/Behavioral Activation Scale and the Sensitivity to Punishment and Sensitivity to Reward Questionnaire to index self-reported reward and punishment sensitivity, and performed the Spatial Orientation Task to index attention to cues signaling reward and punishment. There was extremely strong evidence (BF10 > 100), that adolescents with AN reported higher sensitivity to punishment than adolescents without an eating disorder. However, adolescents with AN did not differ from the comparison group on self-reported reward sensitivity, and attention to cues signaling reward or punishment. Adolescents with AN clearly show heightened punishment sensitivity, yet this was not paralleled by a heightened proneness to detect signals of punishment. An important next step would be to examine whether punishment sensitivity is a reliable risk factor for the development or maintenance of AN.

Highlights

  • Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a severe mental disorder with a high mortality rate (e.g., [1]) that typically develops during adolescence [2]

  • The current study examined whether individuals with AN differ from a non-eating disordered comparison group in their general sensitivity for reward and punishment

  • Punishment sensitivity was not found to relate to persistence of eating disorder symptoms [17], and treatment of AN was not found to result in a decrease in punishment sensitivity [39]

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Summary

Introduction

Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a severe mental disorder with a high mortality rate (e.g., [1]) that typically develops during adolescence [2]. Individuals with AN’s weight and shape are overly important in their self-evaluation, they have an intense fear of gaining weight or becoming fat, and they show a striking ability to restrict their food intake even though they are often (severely) underweight [3]. The disorder is difficult to treat as many individuals do not respond to treatment, drop-out of treatment, or relapse after successful treatment [4,5,6,7,8].

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