Anhedonia in Relation to Reward and Effort Learning in Young People With Depression Symptoms

Loading...
Publication Logo

Date

2023

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Open Access Color

GOLD

Green Open Access

Yes

OpenAIRE Downloads

69

OpenAIRE Views

151

Publicly Funded

No
Impulse
Top 10%
Influence
Average
Popularity
Top 10%

Research Projects

Journal Issue

Abstract

Anhedonia, a central depression symptom, is associated with impairments in reward processing. However, it is not well understood which sub-components of reward processing (anticipation, motivation, consummation, and learning) are impaired in association with anhedonia in depression. In particular, it is unclear how learning about different rewards and the effort needed to obtain them might be associated with anhedonia and depression symptoms. Therefore, we examined learning in young people (N = 132, mean age 20, range 17-25 yrs.) with a range of depression and anhedonia symptoms using a probabilistic instrumental learning task. The task required participants to learn which options to choose to maximize their reward outcomes across three conditions (chocolate taste, puppy images, or money) and to minimize the physical effort required to obtain the rewards. Additionally, we collected questionnaire measures of anticipatory and consummatory anhedonia, as well as subjective reports of "liking", "wanting" and "willingness to exert effort" for the rewards used in the task. We found that as anticipatory anhedonia increased, subjective liking and wanting of rewards decreased. Moreover, higher anticipatory anhedonia was significantly associated with lower reward learning accuracy, and participants demonstrated significantly higher reward learning than effort learning accuracy. To our knowledge, this is the first study observing an association of anhedonia with reward liking, wanting, and learning when reward and effort learning are measured simultaneously. Our findings suggest an impaired ability to learn from rewarding outcomes could contribute to anhedonia in young people. Future longitudinal research is needed to confirm this and reveal the specific aspects of reward learning that predict anhedonia. These aspects could then be targeted by novel anhedonia interventions.

Description

Kaya, M.Siyabend/0000-0001-9614-249X; Mccabe, Ciara/0000-0001-8704-3473; Frey, Anna-Lena/0000-0003-1653-3023

Keywords

Anhedonia, Depression, Youth, Learning, Reward, Effort, anhedonia, youth, learning, depression, Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry, effort, reward, Article, RC321-571

Fields of Science

03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine

Citation

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q2
OpenCitations Logo
OpenCitations Citation Count
5

Source

Brain Sciences

Volume

13

Issue

2

Start Page

341

End Page

PlumX Metrics
Citations

CrossRef : 3

Scopus : 9

PubMed : 3

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 23

SCOPUS™ Citations

9

checked on Mar 06, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

8

checked on Mar 06, 2026

Page Views

3

checked on Mar 06, 2026

Downloads

1

checked on Mar 06, 2026

Google Scholar Logo
Google Scholar™
OpenAlex Logo
OpenAlex FWCI
2.0927
Altmetrics Badge

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG data is not available