Examining social reinforcement learning in social anxiety

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 PSYCHIATRY Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jbtep.2022.101810
Miranda L. Beltzer , Katharine E. Daniel , Alexander R. Daros , Bethany A. Teachman
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Background and objectives

Reinforcement learning biases have been empirically linked to anhedonia in depression and theoretically linked to social anhedonia in social anxiety disorder, but little work has directly assessed how socially anxious individuals learn from social reward and punishment.

Methods

N = 157 individuals high and low in social anxiety symptoms completed a social probabilistic selection task that involved selecting between pairs of neutral faces with varying probabilities of changing to a happy or angry face. Computational modeling was performed to estimate learning rates. Accuracy in choosing the more rewarding face was also analyzed.

Results

No significant group differences were found for learning rates. Contrary to hypotheses, participants high in social anxiety showed impaired punishment learning accuracy; they were more accurate at choosing the most rewarding face than they were at avoiding the most punishing face, and their punishment learning accuracy was lower than that of participants low in social anxiety. Secondary analyses found that high (vs. low) social anxiety participants were less accurate at selecting the more rewarding face on more (vs. less) punishing face pairs.

Limitations

Stimuli were static, White, facial images, which lack important social cues (e.g., movement, sound) and diversity, and participants were largely non-Hispanic, White undergraduates, whose social reinforcement learning may differ from individuals at different developmental stages and those holding more marginalized identities.

Conclusions

Socially anxious individuals may be less accurate at learning to avoid social punishment, which may maintain negative beliefs through an interpersonal stress generation process.

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社会焦虑中的社会强化学习研究
背景和目的强化学习偏见在经验上与抑郁症的快感缺乏有关,在理论上与社交焦虑症的社交快感缺乏有关。但很少有研究直接评估社交焦虑个体如何从社会奖惩中学习。方法N=157名社交焦虑症状高和低的个体完成了一项社会概率选择任务,该任务涉及在不同概率的中性面孔之间进行选择,这些面孔会变成快乐或愤怒的面孔。进行计算建模以估计学习率。还分析了选择更有回报的面孔的准确性。结果学习率组间无显著性差异。与假设相反,高社交焦虑的参与者表现出惩罚学习准确性受损;他们在选择最有回报的面孔方面比在避免最惩罚的面孔方面更准确,并且他们的惩罚学习准确率低于社交焦虑低的参与者。二次分析发现,高(与低)社交焦虑的参与者在选择惩罚较多(与较少)的人脸对上奖励较多的人脸时不太准确。限制刺激是静态的白人面部图像,缺乏重要的社会线索(如运动、声音)和多样性,参与者大多是非西班牙裔白人本科生,他们的社会强化学习可能与处于不同发展阶段的个人和持有更边缘化身份的人不同。结论社会焦虑个体在学习避免社会惩罚方面可能不太准确,这可能通过人际压力的产生过程保持负面信念。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
5.60%
发文量
48
期刊介绍: The publication of the book Psychotherapy by Reciprocal Inhibition (1958) by the co-founding editor of this Journal, Joseph Wolpe, marked a major change in the understanding and treatment of mental disorders. The book used principles from empirical behavioral science to explain psychopathological phenomena and the resulting explanations were critically tested and used to derive effective treatments. The second half of the 20th century saw this rigorous scientific approach come to fruition. Experimental approaches to psychopathology, in particular those used to test conditioning theories and cognitive theories, have steadily expanded, and experimental analysis of processes characterising and maintaining mental disorders have become an established research area.
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