Cooper Jessica A, Gorlick Marissa A, Denny Taylor, Worthy Darrell A, Beevers Christopher G, Maddox W Todd
Department of Psychology, The University of Texas, 108 E. Dean Keeton Stop A8000, Austin, TX, 78712, USA.
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2014 Jun;14(2):729-41. doi: 10.3758/s13415-013-0220-4.
Depression is often characterized by attentional biases toward negative items and away from positive items, which likely affects reward and punishment processing. Recent work has reported that training attention away from negative stimuli reduced this bias and reduced depressive symptoms. However, the effect of attention training on subsequent learning has yet to be explored. In the present study, participants were required to learn to maximize reward during decision making. Undergraduates with elevated self-reported depressive symptoms received attention training toward positive stimuli prior to performing the decision-making task (n = 20; active training). The active-training group was compared to two other groups: undergraduates with elevated self-reported depressive symptoms who received placebo training (n = 22; placebo training) and a control group with low levels of depressive symptoms (n = 33; nondepressive control). The placebo-training depressive group performed worse and switched between options more than did the nondepressive controls on the reward maximization task. However, depressives that received active training performed as well as the nondepressive controls. Computational modeling indicated that the placebo-trained group learned more from negative than from positive prediction errors, leading to more frequent switching. The nondepressive control and active-training depressive groups showed similar learning from positive and negative prediction errors, leading to less-frequent switching and better performance. Our results indicate that individuals with elevated depressive symptoms are impaired at reward maximization, but that the deficit can be improved with attention training toward positive stimuli.
抑郁症通常表现为对负面信息的注意偏向以及对正面信息的注意偏离,这可能会影响奖惩处理。最近的研究报告称,将注意力从负面刺激上转移开的训练可以减少这种偏向,并减轻抑郁症状。然而,注意力训练对后续学习的影响尚未得到探究。在本研究中,参与者需要在决策过程中学会最大化奖励。自我报告抑郁症状较高的大学生在执行决策任务之前接受了针对正面刺激的注意力训练(n = 20;主动训练)。主动训练组与另外两组进行了比较:自我报告抑郁症状较高且接受安慰剂训练的大学生(n = 22;安慰剂训练)和抑郁症状水平较低的对照组(n = 33;非抑郁对照组)。在奖励最大化任务中,安慰剂训练的抑郁组表现比非抑郁对照组更差,并且在不同选项之间切换得更多。然而,接受主动训练的抑郁症患者表现与非抑郁对照组一样好。计算模型表明,接受安慰剂训练的组从负面预测误差中学习比从正面预测误差中学习更多,导致更频繁的切换。非抑郁对照组和主动训练的抑郁组从正面和负面预测误差中表现出相似的学习,导致切换频率更低且表现更好。我们的结果表明,抑郁症状较高的个体在奖励最大化方面存在缺陷,但通过对正面刺激的注意力训练可以改善这种缺陷。