Association between Reward Sensitivity and Smoking Status in Major Depressive Disorder

Chronic nicotine use has been linked to increased sensitivity to nondrug rewards as well as improvement in mood among individuals with depression, and these effects have been hypothesized to be mediated through alternations in striatal dopamine activity. Similarly, chronic nicotine use is hypothesiz...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Feng, Shengchuang
Other Authors: Psychology
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/79954
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05182017-120942/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-799542021-12-18T05:53:06Z Association between Reward Sensitivity and Smoking Status in Major Depressive Disorder Feng, Shengchuang Psychology King-Casas, Brooks Chiu, Pearl H. Li, Jian fMRI depression nicotine prediction error dopamine reward sensitivity Chronic nicotine use has been linked to increased sensitivity to nondrug rewards as well as improvement in mood among individuals with depression, and these effects have been hypothesized to be mediated through alternations in striatal dopamine activity. Similarly, chronic nicotine use is hypothesized to influence the mechanisms by which healthy and depressed individuals learn about rewards in their environment. However, the specific behavioral and neural mechanisms by which nicotine influences the learning process is poorly understood. Here, we use a probabilistic learning task, functional magnetic resonance imaging and neurocomputational analyses, to show that chronic smoking is associated with higher reward sensitivity, along with lower learning rate and striatal prediction error signal. Further, we show that these effects do not differ between individuals with and without major depressive disorder (MDD). In addition, a negative correlation between reward sensitivity and striatal prediction error signal was found among smokers, consistent with the suggestion that enhanced tonic dopamine associated with increased reward sensitivity leads to an attenuation of phasic dopamine activity necessary for updating of reward value during learning. Master of Science 2017-11-02T20:48:46Z 2017-11-02T20:48:46Z 2017-05-10 2017-05-18 2017-06-09 2017-06-09 Thesis Text etd-05182017-120942 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/79954 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05182017-120942/ en_US In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic fMRI
depression
nicotine
prediction error
dopamine
reward sensitivity
spellingShingle fMRI
depression
nicotine
prediction error
dopamine
reward sensitivity
Feng, Shengchuang
Association between Reward Sensitivity and Smoking Status in Major Depressive Disorder
description Chronic nicotine use has been linked to increased sensitivity to nondrug rewards as well as improvement in mood among individuals with depression, and these effects have been hypothesized to be mediated through alternations in striatal dopamine activity. Similarly, chronic nicotine use is hypothesized to influence the mechanisms by which healthy and depressed individuals learn about rewards in their environment. However, the specific behavioral and neural mechanisms by which nicotine influences the learning process is poorly understood. Here, we use a probabilistic learning task, functional magnetic resonance imaging and neurocomputational analyses, to show that chronic smoking is associated with higher reward sensitivity, along with lower learning rate and striatal prediction error signal. Further, we show that these effects do not differ between individuals with and without major depressive disorder (MDD). In addition, a negative correlation between reward sensitivity and striatal prediction error signal was found among smokers, consistent with the suggestion that enhanced tonic dopamine associated with increased reward sensitivity leads to an attenuation of phasic dopamine activity necessary for updating of reward value during learning. === Master of Science
author2 Psychology
author_facet Psychology
Feng, Shengchuang
author Feng, Shengchuang
author_sort Feng, Shengchuang
title Association between Reward Sensitivity and Smoking Status in Major Depressive Disorder
title_short Association between Reward Sensitivity and Smoking Status in Major Depressive Disorder
title_full Association between Reward Sensitivity and Smoking Status in Major Depressive Disorder
title_fullStr Association between Reward Sensitivity and Smoking Status in Major Depressive Disorder
title_full_unstemmed Association between Reward Sensitivity and Smoking Status in Major Depressive Disorder
title_sort association between reward sensitivity and smoking status in major depressive disorder
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/79954
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05182017-120942/
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