Incentive motivation in first-episode psychosis: A behavioural study

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background:</p> <p>It has been proposed that there are abnormalities in incentive motivational processing in psychosis, possibly secondary to subcortical dopamine abnormalities, but few empirical studies have addressed this issue.</p> <p>M...

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Main Authors: Blackwell Andrew D, Corlett Philip R, Clark Luke, Murray Graham K, Cools Roshan, Jones Peter B, Robbins Trevor W, Poustka Luise
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2008-05-01
Series:BMC Psychiatry
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-244X/8/34
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spelling doaj-b211c52cec2248eca3f918ff9a6dda5d2020-11-25T00:23:34ZengBMCBMC Psychiatry1471-244X2008-05-01813410.1186/1471-244X-8-34Incentive motivation in first-episode psychosis: A behavioural studyBlackwell Andrew DCorlett Philip RClark LukeMurray Graham KCools RoshanJones Peter BRobbins Trevor WPoustka Luise<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background:</p> <p>It has been proposed that there are abnormalities in incentive motivational processing in psychosis, possibly secondary to subcortical dopamine abnormalities, but few empirical studies have addressed this issue.</p> <p>Methods:</p> <p>We studied incentive motivation in 18 first-episode psychosis patients from the Cambridge early psychosis service CAMEO and 19 control participants using the Cued Reinforcement Reaction Time Task, which measures motivationally driven behaviour. We also gathered information on participants' attentional, executive and spatial working memory function in order to determine whether any incentive motivation deficits were secondary to generalised cognitive impairment.</p> <p>Results:</p> <p>We demonstrated the anticipated "reinforcement-related speeding" effect in controls (17 out of 19 control participants responded faster during an "odd-one-out" task in response to a cue that indicated a high likelihood of a large points reward). Only 4 out of 18 patients showed this effect and there was a significant interaction effect between reinforcement probability and diagnosis on reaction time (F<sub>1,35 </sub>= 14.2, p = 0.001). This deficit was present in spite of preserved executive and attentional function in patients, and persisted even in antipsychotic medication free patients.</p> <p>Conclusion:</p> <p>There are incentive motivation processing abnormalities in first-episode psychosis; these may be secondary to dopamine dysfunction and are not attributable to generalised cognitive impairment.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-244X/8/34
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Blackwell Andrew D
Corlett Philip R
Clark Luke
Murray Graham K
Cools Roshan
Jones Peter B
Robbins Trevor W
Poustka Luise
spellingShingle Blackwell Andrew D
Corlett Philip R
Clark Luke
Murray Graham K
Cools Roshan
Jones Peter B
Robbins Trevor W
Poustka Luise
Incentive motivation in first-episode psychosis: A behavioural study
BMC Psychiatry
author_facet Blackwell Andrew D
Corlett Philip R
Clark Luke
Murray Graham K
Cools Roshan
Jones Peter B
Robbins Trevor W
Poustka Luise
author_sort Blackwell Andrew D
title Incentive motivation in first-episode psychosis: A behavioural study
title_short Incentive motivation in first-episode psychosis: A behavioural study
title_full Incentive motivation in first-episode psychosis: A behavioural study
title_fullStr Incentive motivation in first-episode psychosis: A behavioural study
title_full_unstemmed Incentive motivation in first-episode psychosis: A behavioural study
title_sort incentive motivation in first-episode psychosis: a behavioural study
publisher BMC
series BMC Psychiatry
issn 1471-244X
publishDate 2008-05-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background:</p> <p>It has been proposed that there are abnormalities in incentive motivational processing in psychosis, possibly secondary to subcortical dopamine abnormalities, but few empirical studies have addressed this issue.</p> <p>Methods:</p> <p>We studied incentive motivation in 18 first-episode psychosis patients from the Cambridge early psychosis service CAMEO and 19 control participants using the Cued Reinforcement Reaction Time Task, which measures motivationally driven behaviour. We also gathered information on participants' attentional, executive and spatial working memory function in order to determine whether any incentive motivation deficits were secondary to generalised cognitive impairment.</p> <p>Results:</p> <p>We demonstrated the anticipated "reinforcement-related speeding" effect in controls (17 out of 19 control participants responded faster during an "odd-one-out" task in response to a cue that indicated a high likelihood of a large points reward). Only 4 out of 18 patients showed this effect and there was a significant interaction effect between reinforcement probability and diagnosis on reaction time (F<sub>1,35 </sub>= 14.2, p = 0.001). This deficit was present in spite of preserved executive and attentional function in patients, and persisted even in antipsychotic medication free patients.</p> <p>Conclusion:</p> <p>There are incentive motivation processing abnormalities in first-episode psychosis; these may be secondary to dopamine dysfunction and are not attributable to generalised cognitive impairment.</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-244X/8/34
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