Abstract

Socially engaging robots have been increasingly applied to alleviate depressive symptoms and to improve the quality of social life among different populations. Seeing that depression negatively influences social reward processing in everyday interaction, we investigate this influence during simulated interactions with humans or robots. In this study, 35 participants with mild depression and 35 controls (all from nonclinical populations) finished the social incentive delay task with event-related potential recording, in which they received performance feedback from other persons or from a robot. Compared to the controls, the mild depressive symptom (MDS) group represented abnormalities of social reward processing in the human feedback condition: first, the MDS group showed a lower hit rate and a smaller contingent-negative variation (correlated with each other) during reward anticipation; second, depression level modulated both the early phase (indexed by the feedback-related negativity (FRN)) and the late phase (indexed by the P3) of reward consumption. In contrast, the effect of depression was evident only on FRN amplitude in the robot feedback condition. We suggest that compared to human–human interaction, the rewarding properties of human–robot interaction are less likely to be affected by depression. These findings have implications for the utilization of robot-assisted intervention in clinical practice.

Highlights

  • Social interaction is essential to people’s livelihood, career development, mental health, and psychological well-being

  • According to our research interest, we focus on three event-related potentials (ERPs) components, including the contingentnegative variation (CNV) associated with cue presentation, and the feedback-related negativity (FRN) and P3 associated with feedback presentation

  • This study examines whether these indexes would be sensitive to the depression level when individuals are interacting with a robot

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Summary

Introduction

Social interaction is essential to people’s livelihood, career development, mental health, and psychological well-being. One of the major motivators for social interaction is to pursue social rewards [1, 2]. Depression is closely associated with the abnormal processing of social rewards at both behavioral and neural levels [4]. Depression severity negatively correlates with the activation level of the human reward system, including dopaminergic neural circuits [8,9,10,11]. These problems in social reward processing inhibit depressed individuals’ motivation to engage in social interaction [12], which could help understand the impairments of social functioning in depression [13]

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