Gaule Anne, Bevilacqua Leonardo, Molleman Lucas, van den Bos Wouter, van Duijvenvoorde Anna C, Roberts Ruth, Pease Christopher R, McCrory Eamon, Viding Essi
University College London, United Kingdom.
University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
JAACAP Open. 2024 Jan 12;2(2):79-89. doi: 10.1016/j.jaacop.2023.12.008. eCollection 2024 Jun.
Learning to successfully navigate the social world, in particular when to trust others and how to work together with them, is crucial to well-adjusted social development. This is especially the case during adolescence, when individuals are undergoing significant biological and social changes. Adolescents with conduct problems (CP) tend to have difficulties in social relationships and to display aggressive behaviors as well as reduced cooperation with others. This pattern appears to be particularly pronounced in adolescents with CP and high callous-unemotional traits (CP/HCU). However, very little is currently known about the mechanisms that might drive reduced cooperative behaviors in adolescent CP, and whether these differ for individuals with high vs low levels of CU traits.
We used a series of economic games to assess how adolescents with CP/HCU (n = 46), CP, and lower levels of CU traits (CP/LCU) (n = 46), and typically developing adolescents (TD) (n = 59) interacted with social (human) and non-social (computer) partners that varied in their degree of cooperation (trustworthy vs untrustworthy and friendly vs unfriendly), and whether this related to group differences in social preferences (aversion to inequality) and prior beliefs.
Adolescents with CP (both HCU and LCU) had more difficulty than TD adolescents in differentiating between trustworthy and untrustworthy social environments in our task. Adolescents with CP/LCU also had more difficulty coordinating with friendly and unfriendly social partners to produce rewarding outcomes than TD adolescents. Surprisingly, we saw no relationship between participants' inequality aversion or prior beliefs and social learning in our games.
These findings indicate that, under controlled experimental conditions, adolescents with CP have more difficulty learning to differentiate between social environments that vary in cooperation, particularly adolescents with CP/LCU. These findings were not explained by inequality aversion or prior beliefs. Our findings also raise important questions regarding methods used to understand the mechanisms underlying social behaviors in adolescents with CP.
学会成功地融入社会,尤其是知道何时信任他人以及如何与他人合作,对于良好的社会适应发展至关重要。在青春期尤其如此,因为此时个体正在经历重大的生理和社会变化。有品行问题(CP)的青少年往往在社会关系中存在困难,表现出攻击性行为,并且与他人的合作减少。这种模式在患有CP且冷酷无情特质高(CP/HCU)的青少年中似乎尤为明显。然而,目前对于可能导致青少年CP合作行为减少的机制知之甚少,以及这些机制在高冷酷无情特质与低冷酷无情特质个体之间是否存在差异也不清楚。
我们使用了一系列经济游戏来评估患有CP/HCU(n = 46)、CP且冷酷无情特质较低(CP/LCU)(n = 46)的青少年以及发育正常的青少年(TD)(n = 59)如何与社会(人类)和非社会(计算机)伙伴互动,这些伙伴在合作程度上有所不同(可信赖与不可信赖、友好与不友好),以及这是否与社会偏好(对不平等的厌恶)和先验信念方面的群体差异有关。
在我们的任务中,患有CP(包括HCU和LCU)的青少年比TD青少年更难以区分可信赖和不可信赖的社会环境。患有CP/LCU的青少年在与友好和不友好的社会伙伴协调以产生有益结果方面也比TD青少年更困难。令人惊讶的是,我们发现参与者的不平等厌恶或先验信念与我们游戏中的社会学习之间没有关系。
这些发现表明,在受控的实验条件下,患有CP的青少年在学习区分合作程度不同的社会环境方面存在更多困难,尤其是患有CP/LCU的青少年。这些发现无法用不平等厌恶或先验信念来解释。我们的发现还就用于理解患有CP的青少年社会行为背后机制的方法提出了重要问题。