1Department of Psychiatry, Amsterdam UMC - University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
2Centre for Urban Mental Health, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Behav Addict. 2024 Feb 9;13(1):226-235. doi: 10.1556/2006.2023.00082. Print 2024 Mar 26.
Decisions and learning processes are under metacognitive control, where confidence in one's actions guides future behaviour. Indeed, studies have shown that being more confident results in less action updating and learning, and vice versa. This coupling between action and confidence can be disrupted, as has been found in individuals with high compulsivity symptoms. Patients with Gambling Disorder (GD) have been shown to exhibit both higher confidence and deficits in learning.
In this study, we tested the hypotheses that patients with GD display increased confidence, reduced action updating and lower learning rates. Additionally, we investigated whether the action-confidence coupling was distorted in patients with GD. To address this, 27 patients with GD and 30 control participants performed a predictive inference task designed to assess action and confidence dynamics during learning under volatility. Action-updating, confidence and their coupling were assessed and computational modeling estimated parameters for learning rates, error sensitivity, and sensitivity to environmental changes.
Contrary to our expectations, results revealed no significant group differences in action updating or confidence levels. Nevertheless, GD patients exhibited a weakened coupling between confidence and action, as well as lower learning rates.
This suggests that patients with GD may underutilize confidence when steering future behavioral choices. Ultimately, these findings point to a disruption of metacognitive control in GD, without a general overconfidence bias in neutral, non-incentivized volatile learning contexts.
决策和学习过程受元认知控制,其中对自身行为的信心指导未来的行为。事实上,研究表明,信心越强,行动更新和学习就越少,反之亦然。这种行为和信心之间的耦合可能会被破坏,正如高强迫症状个体中发现的那样。研究表明,赌博障碍(GD)患者表现出更高的信心和学习缺陷。
在这项研究中,我们检验了以下假设:GD 患者表现出更高的信心、减少的行动更新和更低的学习率。此外,我们还研究了 GD 患者的行动-信心耦合是否存在扭曲。为了解决这个问题,27 名 GD 患者和 30 名对照组参与者进行了一项预测推理任务,旨在评估在波动性下学习过程中的行动和信心动态。评估了行动更新、信心及其耦合,并通过计算模型估计了学习率、误差敏感性和对环境变化的敏感性的参数。
与我们的预期相反,结果显示在行动更新或信心水平方面,两组之间没有显著差异。然而,GD 患者表现出信心和行动之间的耦合减弱,以及较低的学习率。
这表明,GD 患者在引导未来的行为选择时可能会低估信心。最终,这些发现表明,GD 中存在元认知控制的破坏,而在中性、非激励性的易变学习环境中,不存在普遍的过度自信偏见。