Valeria Gigli , Paola Castellano , Valerio Ghezzi , Yuen-Siang Ang , Martino Schettino , Diego A. Pizzagalli , Cristina Ottaviani
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Loneliness and social isolation have detrimental consequences for mental health and act as vulnerability factors for the development of depressive symptoms, such as anhedonia. The mitigation strategies used to contain COVID-19, such as social distancing and lockdowns, allowed us to investigate putative associations between daily objective and perceived social isolation and anhedonic-like behavior.
Methods
Reward-related functioning was objectively assessed using the Probabilistic Reward Task. A total of 114 unselected healthy individuals (71% female) underwent both a laboratory and an ecological momentary assessment. Computational modeling was applied to performance on the Probabilistic Reward Task to disentangle reward sensitivity and learning rate.
Results
Findings revealed that objective, but not subjective, daily social interactions were associated with motivational behavior. Specifically, higher social isolation (less time spent with others) was associated with higher responsivity to rewarding stimuli and a reduced influence of a given reward on successive behavioral choices.
Conclusions
Overall, the current results broaden our knowledge of the potential pathways that link (COVID-19–related) social isolation to altered motivational functioning.