Hypoactivation of ventromedial frontal cortex in major depressive disorder: an MEG study of the Reward Positivity.

Christopher J H Pirrung, Garima Singh, Jeremy Hogeveen, Davin Quinn, James F Cavanagh
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Abstract

Background: The Reward Positivity (RewP) is a sensitive and specific electrophysiological marker of reward receipt. These characteristics make it a compelling candidate marker of dysfunctional reward processing in Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). We previously proposed that the RewP is a temporal nexus for multiple dimensions of reward value, and that a diminished RewP in depression might only reflect a deficit in some of these features. Specifically, we predicted a diminished ventromedial contribution in depression in the context of maintained reward learning.

Methods: We collected magnetoencephalographic (MEG) recordings of reward receipt in 43 individuals with MDD (35 female) and 38 healthy controls (21 female). MEG allows effective source estimation due to the absence of volume conduction that compromises electroencephalographic recordings.

Results: The MEG RewP analogue was generated by a broad set of cortical areas, yet only right ventromedial and right ventral temporal areas were diminished in MDD. These areas correlated with a principal component of anhedonia derived from multiple questionnaires. Compellingly, BA25 was the frontal region with the largest representation in both of these effects.

Conclusions: These findings not only advance our understanding underlying the computation of the RewP, but they also dovetail with convergent findings from other types of functional source imaging in depression, as well as from deep brain stimulation treatments. Together, these discoveries suggest that the RewP may be a valuable marker for objective assessment of reward affect and its disruption in anhedonia.

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Hypoactivation of ventromedial frontal cortex in major depressive disorder: an MEG study of the Reward Positivity. Aperiodic (1/f) neural activity robustly tracks symptom severity changes in treatment-resistant depression. Increased Amygdala Activation during Symptom Provocation Predicts Response to Combined Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation and Exposure Therapy in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder in a Randomized Controlled Trial. Decoding mindfulness with multivariate predictive models. The reward positivity as a predictor of first lifetime onsets of depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation in high-risk adolescents.
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