Der-Avakian Andre, Barnes Samuel A, Markou Athina, Pizzagalli Diego A
Department of Psychiatry, Health Sciences, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Belmont, MA, USA.
Curr Top Behav Neurosci. 2016;28:231-62. doi: 10.1007/7854_2015_5004.
Deficits in reward and motivation are common symptoms characterizing several psychiatric and neurological disorders. Such deficits may include anhedonia, defined as loss of pleasure, as well as impairments in anticipatory pleasure, reward valuation, motivation/effort, and reward learning. This chapter describes recent advances in the development of behavioral tasks used to assess different aspects of reward processing in both humans and non-human animals. While earlier tasks were generally developed independently with limited cross-species correspondence, a newer generation of translational tasks has emerged that are theoretically and procedurally analogous across species and allow parallel testing, data analyses, and interpretation between human and rodent behaviors. Such enhanced conformity between cross-species tasks will facilitate investigation of the neurobiological mechanisms underlying discrete reward and motivated behaviors and is expected to improve our understanding and treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders characterized by reward and motivation deficits.
奖赏和动机缺陷是多种精神疾病和神经疾病的常见症状。这些缺陷可能包括快感缺失(定义为愉悦感丧失),以及预期性愉悦、奖赏评估、动机/努力和奖赏学习方面的损伤。本章描述了用于评估人类和非人类动物奖赏处理不同方面的行为任务开发的最新进展。虽然早期任务通常是独立开发的,跨物种对应性有限,但新一代的转化任务已经出现,这些任务在理论和程序上跨物种类似,允许对人类和啮齿动物行为进行平行测试、数据分析和解释。跨物种任务之间这种增强的一致性将有助于研究离散奖赏和动机行为背后的神经生物学机制,并有望改善我们对以奖赏和动机缺陷为特征的神经精神疾病的理解和治疗。