Jaroszewski Adam C, Millner Alexander J, Gershman Samuel J, Franz Peter J, Bentley Kate H, Kleiman Evan M, Nock Matthew K
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School.
Department of Psychology, Harvard University.
J Psychopathol Clin Sci. 2025 Jul;134(5):503-519. doi: 10.1037/abn0000989. Epub 2025 Apr 10.
Theory and evidence suggest that people attempt suicide to escape acute distress. However, little is known about why people select suicide instead of other ways to escape (e.g., alcohol/drug use). One possibility is that suicide-related stimuli in one's environment (e.g., suicide methods) bias this decision, particularly when such stimuli elicit little aversion. We tested whether suicide-related stimuli bias decisions to escape acute distress. We recruited 360 adults with past 3-month active suicidal thoughts and behaviors (STB; = 120), elevated psychiatric symptoms without STB ( = 152), or no symptoms/STB ( = 88). Participants explicitly rated personalized suicide pictures (e.g., pointing a gun up at oneself) and positive contrasts and completed a behavioral task, where they made decisions to escape an acutely distressing noise in relation to these stimuli. We used a computational model of task performance to capture latent biases hypothetically influencing decision making. We assessed STB 3 months later. Results indicated that people with a past suicide attempt exhibited much lower suicide aversion than others. In the behavioral task, the suicidal group made more impulsive escape decisions in relation to suicide versus positive stimuli. The computational model helped explain this effect, capturing a latent bias driven by the suicide stimuli. Within the suicidal group, weaker biases mediated the association between lower suicide aversion and higher odds of past suicide attempt. These results provide evidence of novel, specific, incrementally valid, and objectively assessed suicide-attempt correlate and suggest that decision science is useful for understanding mechanisms increasing risk for suicide and other escape-related phenomena involving stimulus-driven processes (e.g., substance misuse, and anxiety). (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
理论和证据表明,人们试图自杀是为了逃避急性痛苦。然而,对于人们为何选择自杀而非其他逃避方式(例如,使用酒精/毒品)却知之甚少。一种可能性是,个体环境中与自杀相关的刺激因素(例如,自杀方式)会影响这一决定,尤其是当此类刺激引发的厌恶感较小时。我们测试了与自杀相关的刺激因素是否会影响逃避急性痛苦的决定。我们招募了360名成年人,他们在过去3个月中有积极的自杀想法和行为(STB;n = 120)、有严重精神症状但无STB(n = 152)或无症状/STB(n = 88)。参与者明确对个性化的自杀图片(例如,用枪指着自己)和积极对照进行评分,并完成一项行为任务,即针对这些刺激做出逃避急性痛苦噪音的决定。我们使用任务表现的计算模型来捕捉假设影响决策的潜在偏差。我们在3个月后评估STB情况。结果表明,有过自杀未遂经历的人表现出的自杀厌恶程度远低于其他人。在行为任务中,自杀组相对于积极刺激,在面对自杀刺激时做出了更冲动的逃避决定。计算模型有助于解释这种效应,捕捉到了由自杀刺激驱动的潜在偏差。在自杀组中,较弱的偏差介导了较低的自杀厌恶感与过去自杀未遂较高几率之间 的关联。这些结果为新颖、具体、具有递增效度且经过客观评估的自杀未遂相关因素提供了证据,并表明决策科学有助于理解增加自杀风险以及其他涉及刺激驱动过程的逃避相关现象(例如,药物滥用和焦虑)的机制。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)