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Multiple Dissociations Between Comorbid Depression and Anxiety on Reward and Punishment Processing: Evidence From Computationally Informed EEG Cover

Multiple Dissociations Between Comorbid Depression and Anxiety on Reward and Punishment Processing: Evidence From Computationally Informed EEG

Open Access
|Jan 2019

Abstract

In this report, we provide the first evidence that mood and anxiety dimensions are associated with unique aspects of EEG responses to reward and punishment, respectively. We reanalyzed data from our prior publication of a categorical depiction of depression to address more sophisticated dimensional hypotheses. Highly symptomatic depressed individuals (N = 46) completed a probabilistic learning task with concurrent EEG. Measures of anxiety and depression symptomatology were significantly correlated with each other; however, only anxiety predicted better avoidance learning due to a tighter coupling of negative prediction error signaling with punishment-specific EEG features. In contrast, depression predicted a smaller reward-related EEG feature, but this did not affect prediction error coupling or the ability to learn from reward. We suggest that this reward-related alteration reflects motivational or hedonic aspects of reward and not a diminishment in the ability to represent the information content of reinforcements. These findings compel further research into the domain-specific neural systems underlying dimensional aspects of psychiatric disease.

Language: English
Submitted on: Apr 18, 2018
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Accepted on: Nov 1, 2018
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Published on: Jan 1, 2019
Published by: MIT Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2019 James F. Cavanagh, Andrew W. Bismark, Michael J. Frank, John J. B. Allen, published by MIT Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.