Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
J Clin Exp Neuropsychol. 2021 Dec;43(10):1032-1043. doi: 10.1080/13803395.2022.2058464. Epub 2022 Mar 31.
Low motivation is frequent in older people with HIV, yet poorly understood. Effort-cost decision-making (ECDM) tasks inspired by behavioral economics have shown promise as indicators of motivation or apathy. These tasks assess the willingness to exert effort to earn a monetary reward, providing an estimate of the subjective "cost" of effort for each participant. Here we sought evidence for a relationship between ECDM task performance and self-reported motivation in a cross-sectional study involving 80 middle-aged and older people with well-controlled HIV infection, a chronic health condition with a high burden of mental and cognitive health challenges.
Participants attending a regular follow-up visit for a Canadian longitudinal study of brain health in HIV completed a computerized ECDM task and a self-report measure of motivation. Other brain health measures were available, collected for the parent study (cognition, depression, anxiety, and vitality, as well as self-reported time spent on real-world leisure activities).
Contrary to our hypothesis, we found no relationship between ECDM performance and self-reported motivation. However, those willing to accept higher effort in the ECDM task also reported more time engaged in real-world activities. This association had a small-to-moderate effect size.
The behavioral economics construct of subjective cost of effort, measured with a laboratory ECDM task, does not relate to motivation in people living with chronic HIV. However, the task shows some relationship with real-world goal-directed behavior, suggesting this construct has potential clinical relevance. More work is needed to understand how the subjective cost of effort plays out in clinical symptoms and everyday activities.
HIV 感染者中普遍存在低动力的现象,但目前对此了解甚少。受行为经济学启发的努力成本决策(ECDM)任务已显示出作为动机或冷漠的指标的潜力。这些任务评估了为获得金钱奖励而付出努力的意愿,为每个参与者提供了努力的主观“成本”的估计。在这里,我们在一项涉及 80 名中年及以上 HIV 感染者的横断面研究中寻求了 ECDM 任务表现与自我报告动机之间的关系的证据,HIV 是一种慢性健康状况,具有很高的精神和认知健康挑战负担。
参加加拿大 HIV 大脑健康纵向研究定期随访的参与者完成了一项计算机化的 ECDM 任务和一项自我报告的动机测量。还有其他的大脑健康测量,是为母研究收集的(认知、抑郁、焦虑和活力,以及自我报告的用于现实世界休闲活动的时间)。
与我们的假设相反,我们没有发现 ECDM 表现与自我报告的动机之间存在关系。然而,那些愿意在 ECDM 任务中接受更高努力的人也报告了更多的时间参与现实世界的活动。这种关联具有小到中等的效应大小。
用实验室 ECDM 任务测量的主观努力成本的行为经济学结构与慢性 HIV 感染者的动机无关。然而,该任务与现实世界的目标导向行为有一定的关系,这表明该结构具有潜在的临床相关性。需要进一步的工作来了解主观努力成本在临床症状和日常活动中的表现。