Abstract

Social anxiety disorder is characterized by excessive fear and habitual avoidance of social situations. Decision-making models suggest that patients with anxiety disorders may fail to exhibit goal-directed control over actions. We therefore investigated whether such biases may also be associated with social anxiety and to examine the relationship between such behavior with outcomes from cognitive-behavioral therapy. Patients diagnosed with social anxiety and controls completed an instrumental learning task in which two actions were performed to earn food outcomes. After outcome devaluation, where one outcome was consumed to satiety, participants were re-tested in extinction. Results indicated that, as expected, controls were goal-directed, selectively reducing responding on the action that previously delivered the devalued outcome. Patients with social anxiety, however, exhibited no difference in responding on either action. This loss of a devaluation effect was associated with greater symptom severity and poorer response to therapy. These findings indicate that variations in goal-directed control in social anxiety may represent both a behavioral endophenotype and may be used to predict individuals who will respond to learning-based therapies.

Highlights

  • The diagnostic hallmarks of social anxiety disorder include debilitating fears of negative evaluation and avoidance of associated social situations

  • The results from the present study demonstrated that individuals diagnosed with social anxiety disorder exhibited impairments in flexible goal-directed actions

  • The results, suggest that a loss of goal-directed control over actions may contribute to the maintenance of social anxiety symptoms in social anxiety disorder, and assist with predicting individuals that do not respond to treatment

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Summary

Introduction

The diagnostic hallmarks of social anxiety disorder include debilitating fears of negative evaluation and avoidance of associated social situations. These persistent and repetitive expectations of negative judgment occur independently to the actual probability of such outcomes occurring [1,2,3]. Such beliefs and behaviors are insensitive to actual experienced outcomes, which may indicate a loss of volitional control. Recent reviews have highlighted how anxious or stressed states can result in decision-making deficits, with a shift from volitional, goal-directed control to inflexible habitual responses [4,5]. Of further importance for such research is the extent to which biases in decision-making may predict the success of learning-based psychological treatment

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