Abstract
Performance feedback is vital to rehabilitation interventions that treat cognitive impairments from multiple sclerosis (MS). Optimal treatment relies on participants' motivation to learn from feedback throughout these interventions. Cognitive fatigue, a prevalent symptom of MS, is associated with aberrant reward processing, which necessitates research into how fatigue affects perceived reward value of feedback in these individuals. The current study investigated how trait fatigue influences subjective valuation of feedback and subsequent feedback-seeking behavior in people with MS. 33 MS and 32 neurotypical (NT) participants completed a willingness-to-pay associative memory paradigm that assessed feedback valuation via trial-by-trial decisions to either purchase or forego feedback in service of maximizing a performance-contingent monetary reward. Participant ratings of trait fatigue were also collected. Generalized logistic mixed modeling was used to analyze factors that influenced trial-wise feedback purchase decisions and task performance. Despite reporting greater trait fatigue, MS participants purchased comparable amounts of feedback as NT participants. Like NT participants, MS participants were more likely to purchase feedback when they were less confident about response accuracy. MS participants also performed comparably to NT participants, who both particularly benefited from purchase decisions that yielded negative feedback (i.e., indicating a response error). Trait cognitive fatigue may not impact performance feedback valuation in people with MS. Nonetheless, confidence in performance may drive their feedback-seeking behavior and may serve as a target for improving learning throughout cognitive rehabilitation and maximizing treatment success.
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