Abstract

Anhedonia, or the loss of interest and/or pleasure, is a core symptom of depression. Individuals experiencing anhedonia have difficulty motivating themselves to pursue rewarding stimuli, which can result in dysfunction. Action orientation is a motivational factor that might interact with anhedonia to potentially buffer against this dysfunction, as action-oriented individuals upregulate positive affect to quickly motivate themselves to complete goals in the face of stress. The Effort-Expenditure for Rewards Task (EEfRT) is a promising new method for examining differences in motivation in individuals experiencing anhedonia. In the EEfRT, participants choose either easier tasks associated with smaller monetary rewards or harder tasks associated with larger monetary rewards. We examined the relationship between action orientation and EEfRT performance following a negative mood induction in a sample with varying levels of anhedonia. There were two competing hypotheses: (1) action orientation would act as a buffer against anhedonia such that action-oriented individuals, regardless of anhedonic symptoms, would be motivated to pursue greater rewards despite stress, or (2) anhedonia would act as a debilitating factor such that individuals with elevated anhedonic symptoms, regardless of action orientation, would not pursue greater rewards. We examined these hypotheses via Generalized Estimating Equations and found an interaction between anhedonia and action orientation. At low levels of anhedonia, action orientation was associated with effort for reward, but this relationship was not present at high levels of anhedonia. Thus, at low levels of anhedonia, action orientation acted as a buffer against stress, but at high levels, anhedonia debilitated action orientation so that it was no longer a promotive factor.

Highlights

  • Anhedonia is a core symptom of depression [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Results of Model 1 provide evidence for both the debilitation hypothesis, as action control was not associated with HC/HR choice at high levels of anhedonia, and the buffering hypothesis, as action control was associated with HC/HR choice at low levels of anhedonia

  • Our findings suggest that individuals who report a trait ability to upregulate positive affect in times of stress are unable to do so when experiencing recent increases in anhedonic symptoms

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Summary

Introduction

Anhedonia is a core symptom of depression [1,2,3,4,5]. Individuals experiencing anhedonia can have difficulty motivating themselves to pursue rewarding stimuli, causing dysfunction. Recent changes in anhedonia—that is, the loss of interest or pleasure—may be especially associated with depression [6,7,8]. This is because a loss signals that a person previously enjoyed and/or had interest in certain activities or social settings (i.e., had a functioning reward system), but that he or she is getting less reward from those experiences [9,10]. As a result of reduced interest in or pleasure derived from activities once enjoyed, individuals experiencing anhedonia experience lowered levels of positive affect. Positive affect plays an important role in volition, or the will to execute one’s goals [11], suggesting that the decreased levels of motivation seen in anhedonic individuals may result from a decrease in positive affect

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