Kinard Jessica Lynn, Mosner Maya Gelman, Greene Rachel Kirsten, Addicott Merideth, Bizzell Joshua, Petty Chris, Cernasov Paul, Walsh Erin, Eisenlohr-Moul Tory, Carter Ronald McKell, McLamb Marcy, Hopper Alissa, Sukhu Rebecca, Dichter Gabriel Sviatoslav
Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Division of Speech and Hearing Sciences, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Autism Res. 2020 May;13(5):715-728. doi: 10.1002/aur.2273. Epub 2020 Feb 11.
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is characterized by impaired predictive abilities; however, the neural mechanisms subsuming reward prediction errors in ASD are poorly understood. In the current study, we investigated neural responses during social and nonsocial reward prediction errors in 22 adolescents with ASD (ages 12-17) and 20 typically developing control adolescents (ages 12-18). Participants performed a reward prediction error task using both social (i.e., faces) and nonsocial (i.e., objects) rewards during a functional magnetic resonance imaging scan. Reward prediction errors were defined in two ways: (a) the signed prediction error, the difference between the experienced and expected reward; and (b) the thresholded unsigned prediction error, the difference between expected and unexpected outcomes regardless of magnitude. During social reward prediction errors, the ASD group demonstrated the following differences relative to the TD group: (a) signed prediction error: decreased activation in the right precentral gyrus and increased activation in the right frontal pole; and (b) thresholded unsigned prediction error: increased activation in the right anterior cingulate gyrus and bilateral precentral gyrus. Groups did not differ in brain activation during nonsocial reward prediction errors. Within the ASD group, exploratory analyses revealed that reaction times and social-communication impairments were related to precentral gyrus activation during social prediction errors. These findings elucidate the neural mechanisms of social reward prediction errors in ASD and suggest that ASD is characterized by greater neural atypicalities during social, relative to nonsocial, reward prediction errors in ASD. Autism Res 2020, 13: 715-728. © 2020 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc. LAY SUMMARY: We used brain imaging to evaluate differences in brain activation in adolescents with autism while they performed tasks that involved learning about social and nonsocial information. We found no differences in brain responses during the nonsocial condition, but differences during the social condition of the learning task. This study provides evidence that autism may involve different patterns of brain activation when learning about social information.
自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的特征是预测能力受损;然而,人们对ASD中包含奖励预测误差的神经机制知之甚少。在本研究中,我们调查了22名患有ASD的青少年(年龄在12 - 17岁)和20名发育正常的对照青少年(年龄在12 - 18岁)在社交和非社交奖励预测误差期间的神经反应。参与者在功能磁共振成像扫描期间使用社交(即面孔)和非社交(即物体)奖励执行奖励预测误差任务。奖励预测误差通过两种方式定义:(a)有符号预测误差,即实际获得的奖励与预期奖励之间的差异;(b)阈值化无符号预测误差,即预期结果与意外结果之间的差异,无论其大小如何。在社交奖励预测误差期间,与发育正常组相比,ASD组表现出以下差异:(a)有符号预测误差:右侧中央前回激活减少,右侧额极激活增加;(b)阈值化无符号预测误差:右侧前扣带回和双侧中央前回激活增加。在非社交奖励预测误差期间,两组的大脑激活没有差异。在ASD组内,探索性分析表明,反应时间和社交沟通障碍与社交预测误差期间中央前回的激活有关。这些发现阐明了ASD中社交奖励预测误差的神经机制,并表明相对于非社交奖励预测误差,ASD的特征是在社交奖励预测误差期间存在更大的神经非典型性。《自闭症研究》2020年,13: 715 - 728。© 2020国际自闭症研究协会,威利期刊公司。内容摘要:我们使用脑成像技术评估患有自闭症的青少年在执行涉及学习社交和非社交信息的任务时大脑激活的差异。我们发现在非社交条件下大脑反应没有差异,但在学习任务的社交条件下存在差异。这项研究提供了证据,表明自闭症在学习社交信息时可能涉及不同的大脑激活模式。