Abstract

Compulsive individuals have deficits in model-based planning, but the mechanisms that drive this have not been established. We examined two candidates—that compulsivity is linked to (1) an impaired model of the task environment and/or (2) an inability to engage cognitive control when making choices. To test this, 192 participants performed a two-step reinforcement learning task with concurrent EEG recordings, and we related the neural and behavioral data to their scores on a self-reported transdiagnostic dimension of compulsivity. To examine subjects' internal model of the task, we used established behavioral and neural responses to unexpected events [reaction time (RT) slowing, P300 wave, and parietal-occipital alpha band power] measured when an unexpected transition occurred. To assess cognitive control, we probed theta power at the time of initial choice. As expected, model-based planning was linked to greater behavioral (RT) and neural (alpha power, but not P300) sensitivity to rare transitions. Critically, the sensitivities of both RT and alpha to task structure were weaker in those high in compulsivity. This RT-compulsivity effect was tested and replicated in an independent pre-existing dataset (N = 1413). We also found that mid-frontal theta power at the time of choice was reduced in highly compulsive individuals though its relation to model-based planning was less pronounced. These data suggest that model-based planning deficits in compulsive individuals may arise, at least in part, from having an impaired representation of the environment, specifically how actions lead to future states.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Compulsivity is linked to poorer performance on tasks that require model-based planning, but it is unclear what precise mechanisms underlie this deficit. Do compulsive individuals fail to engage cognitive control at the time of choice? Or do they have difficulty in building and maintaining an accurate representation of their environment, the foundation needed to behave in a goal-directed manner? With reaction time and EEG measures in 192 individuals who performed a two-step decision-making task, we found that compulsive individuals are less sensitive to surprising action–state transitions, where they slow down less and show less alpha band suppression following a rare transition. These findings implicate failures in maintaining an accurate model of the world in model-based planning deficits in compulsivity.

Highlights

  • Compulsive behavior manifests as out-of-control and repetitive actions, often leading to functionally impairing outcomes (Robbins et al, 2012)

  • This symptomology is characteristic of psychiatric disorders like obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and addiction, and is thought to arise from an imbalance between the following two modes of action control (Gillan and Robbins, 2014): (1) goaldirected “model-based” (MB) planning relying on knowledge of how actions lead to specific outcomes and (2) rigid habits depending on reflexive stimulus–response associations that form slowly over time (Dickinson, 1985; Balleine and O’Doherty, 2010)

  • reaction time (RT) sensitivity to task structure Someone who is aware of the task structure should expect to be presented with the second-stage state that is most commonly associated with their first-stage choice

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Summary

Introduction

Compulsive behavior manifests as out-of-control and repetitive actions, often leading to functionally impairing outcomes (Robbins et al, 2012) This symptomology is characteristic of psychiatric disorders like obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and addiction, and is thought to arise from an imbalance between the following two modes of action control (Gillan and Robbins, 2014): (1) goaldirected “model-based” (MB) planning relying on knowledge of how actions lead to specific outcomes and (2) rigid habits depending on reflexive stimulus–response associations that form slowly over time (Dickinson, 1985; Balleine and O’Doherty, 2010). Seow et al · Task Structure Representations in Compulsivity these decision systems causes habitual behaviors to dominate (Lee et al, 2014; Gruner et al, 2016); but rather than being solely an arbitration failure, recent evidence suggest that compulsivity may be primarily associated with goal-directed control impairments. Recent work has shown that this dysfunction has a developmental course (Vaghi et al, 2020) and is best captured by a compulsivity dimension in both general population and patient samples (Gillan et al, 2016)

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