Daily Social Isolation Maps Onto Distinctive Features of Anhedonic Behavior: A Combined Ecological and Computational Investigation

Valeria Gigli , Paola Castellano , Valerio Ghezzi , Yuen-Siang Ang , Martino Schettino , Diego A. Pizzagalli , Cristina Ottaviani
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Abstract

Background

Loneliness and social isolation have detrimental consequences for mental health and act as vulnerability factors for the development of depressive symptoms, such as anhedonia. The mitigation strategies used to contain COVID-19, such as social distancing and lockdowns, allowed us to investigate putative associations between daily objective and perceived social isolation and anhedonic-like behavior.

Methods

Reward-related functioning was objectively assessed using the Probabilistic Reward Task. A total of 114 unselected healthy individuals (71% female) underwent both a laboratory and an ecological momentary assessment. Computational modeling was applied to performance on the Probabilistic Reward Task to disentangle reward sensitivity and learning rate.

Results

Findings revealed that objective, but not subjective, daily social interactions were associated with motivational behavior. Specifically, higher social isolation (less time spent with others) was associated with higher responsivity to rewarding stimuli and a reduced influence of a given reward on successive behavioral choices.

Conclusions

Overall, the current results broaden our knowledge of the potential pathways that link (COVID-19–related) social isolation to altered motivational functioning.

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日常社交隔离映射到厌世行为的独特特征:生态学与计算研究的结合
背景孤独和社会隔离会对心理健康产生不利影响,并成为抑郁症状(如失神)发展的易感因素。用于遏制 COVID-19 的缓解策略(如社交疏远和锁定)使我们能够研究日常客观和感知的社交孤立与类似失乐症的行为之间的假定关联。共有 114 名未经挑选的健康人(71% 为女性)接受了实验室和生态瞬间评估。结果发现,客观而非主观的日常社会交往与动机行为有关。结论总之,目前的研究结果拓宽了我们对(与 COVID-19 相关的)社会隔离与动机功能改变之间潜在联系的认识。
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Biological psychiatry global open science
Biological psychiatry global open science Psychiatry and Mental Health
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审稿时长
91 days
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