Greene Rachel K, Damiano-Goodwin Cara R, Walsh Erin, Bizzell Joshua, Dichter Gabriel S
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, USA.
Autism Res Treat. 2020 Mar 21;2020:8014248. doi: 10.1155/2020/8014248. eCollection 2020.
Previous studies examining the neural substrates of reward processing in ASD have explored responses to rewards for oneself but not rewards earned for others (i.e., vicarious reward). This omission is notable given that vicarious reward processing is a critical component of creating and maintaining social relationships. The current study examined the neural mechanisms of vicarious reward processing in 15 adults with ASD and 15 age- and gender-matched typically developing controls. Individuals with ASD demonstrated attenuated activation of reward-related regions during vicarious reward processing. Altered connectivity was also observed in individuals with ASD during reward receipt. These findings of altered neural sensitivity to vicarious reward processing may represent a mechanism that hinders the development of social abilities in ASD.
以往研究自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)中奖励处理的神经基础时,探究的是对自身奖励的反应,而非为他人赢得的奖励(即替代性奖励)。鉴于替代性奖励处理是建立和维持社会关系的关键组成部分,这一疏漏值得关注。本研究调查了15名患有ASD的成年人以及15名年龄和性别匹配的发育正常的对照者在替代性奖励处理中的神经机制。患有ASD的个体在替代性奖励处理过程中,与奖励相关区域的激活减弱。在奖励接收过程中,ASD个体也出现了连接性改变。这些关于替代性奖励处理的神经敏感性改变的发现,可能代表了一种阻碍ASD社交能力发展的机制。