Abstract

Motivational deficits play a central role in disability due to negative symptoms of schizophrenia (SZ), but limited pathophysiological understanding impedes critically needed therapeutic development. We applied an fMRI Effort Discounting Task (EDT) that quantifies motivation using a neuroeconomic decision-making approach, capturing the degree to which effort requirements produce reductions in the subjective value (SV) of monetary reward. An analyzed sample of 21 individuals with SZ and 23 group-matched controls performed the EDT during fMRI. We hypothesized that ventral striatum (VS) as well as extended brain motivation circuitry would encode SV, integrating reward and effort costs. We also hypothesized that VS hypoactivation during EDT decisions would demonstrate a dimensional relationship with clinical amotivation severity, reflecting greater suppression by effort costs. As hypothesized, VS as well as a broader cortico-limbic network were activated during the EDT and this activation correlated positively with SV. In SZ, activation to task decisions was reduced selectively in VS. Greater VS reductions correlated with more severe clinical amotivation in SZ and across all participants. However, these diagnosis and amotivation effects could not be explained by the response to parametric variation in reward, effort, or model-based SV. Our findings demonstrate that VS hypofunction in schizophrenia is manifested during effort-based decisions and reflects dimensional motivation impairment. Dysfunction of VS impacting effort-based decision-making can provide a target for biomarker development to guide novel efforts to assess and treat disabling amotivation.

Highlights

  • Amotivation is a prominent negative symptom of schizophrenia (SZ) and a major driver of long-term disability[1,2,3,4]

  • We found that ventral striatum, the core brain region underpinning motivation, was hypoactive during effort-based decision-making in schizophrenia and this hypofunction correlated with clinical amotivation severity

  • ventral striatum (VS) activation corresponded to model-based subjective value, integrating reward magnitude and effort costs; the key clinical findings in VS were not captured by model-based analyses

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Amotivation is a prominent negative symptom of schizophrenia (SZ) and a major driver of long-term disability[1,2,3,4]. SZ is associated with abnormal EBDM behavior, reduced willingness to increase effort to obtain rewards of greater value or probability, suggesting greater subjective cost of effort[1,8,10,11,12] These categorical diagnostic effects may reflect dimensional variation, as several studies in SZ show an inverse correlation between negative symptom severity and willingness to exert effort[10,13,14,15,16,17]. This allowed us to analyze activation during decision- dACC nor vmPFC activation showed group effects or amotivation making as well as activation that relates to effort cost, correlations in any of these analyses (p’s > 0.1); In whole-brain reward, and subjective value.

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