This is a preprint.
Blunted ventral striatal reactivity to social reward is associated with more severe motivation and pleasure deficits in psychosis
- PMID: 38947025
- PMCID: PMC11213233
- DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-4468839/v1
Blunted ventral striatal reactivity to social reward is associated with more severe motivation and pleasure deficits in psychosis
Update in
-
Blunted Ventral Striatal Reactivity to Social Reward Is Associated with More Severe Motivation and Pleasure Deficits in Psychosis.Schizophr Bull. 2025 Nov 10;51(6):1620-1636. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbae221. Schizophr Bull. 2025. PMID: 39779457 Free PMC article.
Abstract
Among individuals living with psychotic disorders, social impairment is common, debilitating, and challenging to treat. While the roots of this impairment are undoubtedly complex, converging lines of evidence suggest that social motivation and pleasure (MAP) deficits play a key role. Yet most neuroimaging studies have focused on monetary rewards, precluding decisive inferences. Here we leveraged parallel social and monetary incentive delay fMRI paradigms to test whether blunted reactivity to social incentives in the ventral striatum-a key component of the distributed neural circuit mediating appetitive motivation and hedonic pleasure-is associated with more severe MAP symptoms in a transdiagnostic sample enriched for psychosis. To maximize ecological validity and translational relevance, we capitalized on naturalistic audiovisual clips of an established social partner expressing positive feedback. Although both paradigms robustly engaged the ventral striatum, only reactivity to social incentives was associated with clinician-rated MAP deficits. This association remained significant when controlling for other symptoms, binary diagnostic status, or ventral striatum reactivity to monetary incentives. Follow-up analyses suggested that this association predominantly reflects diminished striatal activation during the receipt of social reward. These observations provide a neurobiologically grounded framework for conceptualizing the social-anhedonia symptoms and social impairments that characterize many individuals living with psychotic disorders and underscore the need to establish targeted intervention strategies.
Keywords: anhedonia/avolition; fMRI; incentive delay paradigm; negative symptoms; psychosis/psychotic spectrum; schizophrenia.
Conflict of interest statement
Additional Declarations: The authors have declared there is NO conflict of interest to disclose CONFLICTS OF INTEREST The authors declare that there were no conflicts of interest with respect to the authorship or the publication of this article.
Figures
References
-
- Cloutier B, Francoeur A, Samson C, Ghostine A, Lecomte T. Romantic relationships, sexuality, and psychotic disorders: A systematic review of recent findings. Psychiatric rehabilitation journal 2021; 44: 22–42. - PubMed
-
- Gooding DC, Pflum M. The transdiagnostic nature of social anhedonia: Historical and current perspectives. Current topics in behavioral neurosciences 2022; 58: 381–395. - PubMed
-
- Koutra K, Triliva S, Roumeliotaki T, Basta M, Lionis C, Vgontzas AN. Family functioning in first-episode and chronic psychosis: The role of patient’s symptom severity and psychosocial functioning. Community mental health journal 2016; 52: 710–723. - PubMed
Publication types
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
