Title of article
Abnormal Neural Sensitivity to Monetary Gains Versus Losses Among Adolescents at Risk for Depression
Author/Authors
Dan Foti، نويسنده , , Roman Kotov، نويسنده , , Daniel N. Klein & Greg Hajcak، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
12
From page
913
To page
924
Abstract
Major depressive disorder aggregates within
families, although the mechanisms of transfer across
generations are not well understood. In light of converging
biological and behavioral evidence that depressive symptoms
are associated with impaired reward processing, we
examined whether adolescent girls with a parental history
of depression would also exhibit abnormal reward sensitivity.
We performed a negative mood induction and then
recorded the feedback negativity, a neural index of reward
processing, while individuals completed a gambling task.
High-risk adolescents reported greater sadness following
the mood induction compared to low-risk adolescents.
Among the high-risk group, sadness was strongly associated
with a blunted feedback negativity, even after
controlling for baseline mood and trait neuroticism. This
suggests that high-risk adolescents are more reactive to
negative stimuli, which significantly alter neural sensitivity
to monetary gains and losses. The feedback negativity
might be used to identify information processing abnormalities
in high-risk populations prior to the onset of a
major depressive episode.
Keywords
EEG . ERP. Depression . Adolescence .Reward . Feedback negativity
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
829252
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