Abstract

Objective:Recent findings suggest that diminished processing of positive contextual information about others during interactions may contribute to social impairment in the schizophrenia spectrum. This could be due to general social context processing deficits or specific biases against positive information. We studied the impact of positive and negative social contextual information during social interactions using functional neuroimaging and probed whether these neural mechanisms were associated with real-life social functioning in schizophrenia spectrum disorders.Methods:Patients with a schizophrenia spectrum disorder (N = 23) and controls disorder (N = 25) played three multi-round trust games during functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning, with no, positive and negative information about the counterpart’s trustworthiness, while all counterparts were programmed to behave trustworthy. The main outcome variable was the height of the shared amount in the trust game, i.e. investment, representing an indication of trust. The first investment in the game was considered to be basic trust, since no behavioural feedback was given yet. We performed region-of-interest analyses and examined the association with real-life social functioning using the experience sampling method.Results:Social contextual information had no effect on patients’ first investments, whereas controls made the lowest investment after negative and the highest investments after positive contextual information was provided. Over trials, patients decreased investments, suggesting reduced social reward learning, whereas controls increased investments in response to behavioural feedback in the negative context. Patients engaged the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex less than controls during context presentation and showed reduced activity within the caudate during repayments. In patients, lower investments were associated with more time spent alone and social exclusion and lower caudate activation was marginally significantly associated with higher perceived social exclusion.Conclusion:The failure to adapt trust to positive and negative social contexts suggests that patients have a general insensitivity to prior social information, indicating top-down processing impairments. In addition, patients show reduced sensitivity to social reward, i.e. bottom-up processing deficits. Moreover, lower trust and lower neural activation were related to lower real-life social functioning. Together, these findings indicate that improving trust and social interactions in schizophrenia spectrum needs a multi-faceted approach that targets both mechanisms.

Highlights

  • The ability to integrate social contextual information and behavioural feedback from others is necessary for successful social interactions (Ruz et al, 2011) and is an important foundation of trust in social relationships (Lewicki and Wiethoff, 2006)

  • These findings indicate that improving trust and social interactions in schizophrenia spectrum needs a multi-faceted approach that targets both mechanisms

  • An additional criterion for patients was an SZ diagnosis according to the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems–Tenth Edition (ICD-10; World Health Organization (WHO), 1992), which was confirmed with the treating National Health Service (NHS) clinician

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Summary

Introduction

The ability to integrate social contextual information and behavioural feedback from others is necessary for successful social interactions (Ruz et al, 2011) and is an important foundation of trust in social relationships (Lewicki and Wiethoff, 2006). Individuals with a schizophrenia spectrum (SZ) diagnosis, hereafter referred to as patients, show a reduced ability in judging social signals (Penn et al, 2008). There are deficits in learning from others’ behavioural feedback during social interactions, suggesting problems in bottom-up mechanisms. There are problems with the integration of a priori contextual information in a topdown way (Chung et al, 2010; Hooker et al, 2011). We investigate how these two mechanisms of social information processing impact on social behaviour in real-time interactions, using a modified neuroeconomic trust game (Fett et al, 2015)

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