Carina S Brown, Audrey Nuñez, Christina E Wierenga
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Altered value-based decision-making in anorexia nervosa: A systematic review.
Alterations in decision-making are considered core to anorexia nervosa (AN) phenomenology and may maintain illness through maladaptive choice behavior. This systematic review (n = 77) aimed to extend prior reviews beyond standard neuropsychological batteries by incorporating novel value-based choice tasks and computational methods. We organize findings across key factors, including: 1) illness stage, 2) developmental stage, and 3) AN subtype, and highlight available neuroimaging findings. Differences in decision-making appear consistent during illness, including in weight-restored samples, but not in recovery and not in all domains. Differences are not consistently present in adolescence, although punishment sensitivity may be heightened; AN subtypes are not consistently distinguishable. Overall, decision-making varies by context and is influenced by reward/punishment processing, risk/uncertainty, and flexibility/control. Utilization of computational modeling methods, possibly increasing precision, highlight that, although raw behavior may not differ at recovery, latent decision-making processes appear impacted. Clinical interventions may benefit from consideration of context when working to shape choice behavior and from consideration of latent decision-making processes that influence how choices are made.
期刊介绍:
The official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society publishes original and significant review articles that explore the intersection between neuroscience and the study of psychological processes and behavior. The journal also welcomes articles that primarily focus on psychological processes and behavior, as long as they have relevance to one or more areas of neuroscience.