Using Drift Diffusion and RL Models to Disentangle Effects of Depression On Decision-Making vs. Learning in the Probabilistic Reward Task.

Computational psychiatry (Cambridge, Mass.) Pub Date : 2024-05-03 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.5334/cpsy.108
Daniel G Dillon, Emily L Belleau, Julianne Origlio, Madison McKee, Aava Jahan, Ashley Meyer, Min Kang Souther, Devon Brunner, Manuel Kuhn, Yuen Siang Ang, Cristina Cusin, Maurizio Fava, Diego A Pizzagalli
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Abstract

The Probabilistic Reward Task (PRT) is widely used to investigate the impact of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) on reinforcement learning (RL), and recent studies have used it to provide insight into decision-making mechanisms affected by MDD. The current project used PRT data from unmedicated, treatment-seeking adults with MDD to extend these efforts by: (1) providing a more detailed analysis of standard PRT metrics-response bias and discriminability-to better understand how the task is performed; (2) analyzing the data with two computational models and providing psychometric analyses of both; and (3) determining whether response bias, discriminability, or model parameters predicted responses to treatment with placebo or the atypical antidepressant bupropion. Analysis of standard metrics replicated recent work by demonstrating a dependency between response bias and response time (RT), and by showing that reward totals in the PRT are governed by discriminability. Behavior was well-captured by the Hierarchical Drift Diffusion Model (HDDM), which models decision-making processes; the HDDM showed excellent internal consistency and acceptable retest reliability. A separate "belief" model reproduced the evolution of response bias over time better than the HDDM, but its psychometric properties were weaker. Finally, the predictive utility of the PRT was limited by small samples; nevertheless, depressed adults who responded to bupropion showed larger pre-treatment starting point biases in the HDDM than non-responders, indicating greater sensitivity to the PRT's asymmetric reinforcement contingencies. Together, these findings enhance our understanding of reward and decision-making mechanisms that are implicated in MDD and probed by the PRT.

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利用漂移扩散和 RL 模型来区分抑郁对概率奖励任务中决策与学习的影响
概率奖励任务(PRT)被广泛用于研究重度抑郁症(MDD)对强化学习(RL)的影响,最近的研究还利用它来深入了解受 MDD 影响的决策机制。当前的项目使用了来自未服药、寻求治疗的成年 MDD 患者的 PRT 数据,通过以下方式扩展了这些研究:(1)对 PRT 的标准指标--反应偏差和可辨别性--进行更详细的分析,以更好地了解任务是如何完成的;(2)使用两个计算模型分析数据,并对这两个模型进行心理计量分析;(3)确定反应偏差、可辨别性或模型参数是否能预测对安慰剂或非典型抗抑郁药安非他酮治疗的反应。对标准指标的分析重复了最近的工作,证明了反应偏差与反应时间(RT)之间的依赖关系,并表明 PRT 中的奖励总数受可辨别性的支配。分层漂移扩散模型(HDDM)很好地捕捉了行为,该模型模拟了决策过程;HDDM 显示出极好的内部一致性和可接受的重测可靠性。一个单独的 "信念 "模型比 HDDM 更好地再现了反应偏差随时间的演变,但其心理测量特性较弱。最后,PRT 的预测效用受到了小样本的限制;然而,对安非他酮有反应的抑郁症成人在 HDDM 中显示出的治疗前起点偏差大于未反应者,这表明他们对 PRT 的非对称强化或然性更敏感。总之,这些发现加深了我们对奖赏和决策机制的理解,而这些机制与 MDD 有关,并通过 PRT 得到了探究。
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