社会环境和奖励敏感性在共享奖励体验过程中增强皮层功能。

David V Smith, Ori Zaff, James B Wyngaarden, Jeffrey B Dennison, Daniel Sazhin, Jason Chein, Michael McCloskey, Lauren B Alloy, Johanna M Jarcho, Dominic S Fareri
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管先前的研究表明,当与密切的社会关系分享奖励时,纹状体反应会增强,但对于在社会环境中体验奖励时,个体差异如何影响腹侧纹状体(VS)的激活和连接,人们知之甚少。鉴于自我报告的奖励敏感性和物质使用水平与VS激活的差异有关,我们着手调查这些因素是否与社会背景下神经奖励反应的增强独立相关。在这项预先注册的研究中,参与者(N=45)在玩猜牌游戏时接受了功能磁共振成像,在猜牌游戏中,正确或不正确的猜测会导致金钱收益和损失,这些收益和损失由亲密的朋友、陌生人(同伙)或非人类伴侣平均分担。与我们之前的工作一致,我们发现当与社交距离较近的同龄人分享奖励时,VS的激活率会增加,而不是与网络外的陌生人分享奖励。随着自我报告的奖励敏感性的增加,VS对与朋友和陌生人分享的奖励的反应差异减小。我们还发现,与陌生人相比,与亲密朋友分享奖励时,VS和颞顶叶交界处之间的连接增强。最后,探索性分析显示,随着奖赏敏感性和亚临床物质使用的增加,VS与右侧纺锤形面部区域的连通性差异随着社会背景的变化而增加。这些发现表明,对亲密朋友环境的反应可能与个人奖励敏感性或亚临床药物使用习惯有关;这些因素加在一起可以为未来心理健康障碍的风险预测提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social Closeness and Reward Sensitivity Enhance Corticostriatal Function during Experiences of Shared Rewards.

Although prior research has demonstrated enhanced striatal response when sharing rewards with close social connections, less is known about how individual differences affect ventral striatal (VS) activation and connectivity when experiencing rewards within social contexts. Given that self-reported reward sensitivity and level of substance use have been associated with differences in VS activation, we set out to investigate whether these factors would be independently associated with enhancements to neural reward responses within social contexts. In this pre-registered study, participants (N=45) underwent fMRI while playing a card guessing game in which correct or incorrect guesses resulted in monetary gains and losses that were shared evenly with either a close friend, stranger (confederate), or non-human partner. Consistent with our prior work, we found increased VS activation when sharing rewards with a socially close peer as opposed to an out-of-network stranger. As self-reported reward sensitivity increased, the difference in VS response to rewards shared with friends and strangers decreased. We also found enhanced connectivity between the VS and temporoparietal junction when sharing rewards with close friends as opposed to strangers. Finally, exploratory analyses revealed that as reward sensitivity and sub-clinical substance use increase, the difference in VS connectivity with the right fusiform face area increases as a function of social context. These findings demonstrate that responsivity to the context of close friends may be tied to individual reward sensitivity or sub-clinical substance use habits; together these factors may inform predictions of risk for future mental health disorders.

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