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DOI: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2016.16070774
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

Common Dimensional Reward Deficits Across Mood and Psychotic Disorders: A Connectome-Wide Association Study

Anup Sharma,Daniel H. Wolf,Rastko Ćirić,Joseph W. Kable,Tyler M. Moore,Simon Vandekar,Natalie Katchmar,Aylin Daldal,Kosha Ruparel,Christos Davatzikos,Mark A. Elliott,Monica E. Calkins,Russell T. Shinohara,Danielle S. Bassett,Theodore D. Satterthwaite

Nucleus accumbens
Anhedonia
Default mode network
2017
Anhedonia is central to multiple psychiatric disorders and causes substantial disability. A dimensional conceptualization posits that anhedonia severity is related to a transdiagnostic continuum of reward deficits in specific neural networks. Previous functional connectivity studies related to anhedonia have focused on case-control comparisons in specific disorders, using region-specific seed-based analyses. Here, the authors explore the entire functional connectome in relation to reward responsivity across a population of adults with heterogeneous psychopathology.In a sample of 225 adults from five diagnostic groups (major depressive disorder, N=32; bipolar disorder, N=50; schizophrenia, N=51; psychosis risk, N=39; and healthy control subjects, N=53), the authors conducted a connectome-wide analysis examining the relationship between a dimensional measure of reward responsivity (the reward sensitivity subscale of the Behavioral Activation Scale) and resting-state functional connectivity using multivariate distance-based matrix regression.The authors identified foci of dysconnectivity associated with reward responsivity in the nucleus accumbens, the default mode network, and the cingulo-opercular network. Follow-up analyses revealed dysconnectivity among specific large-scale functional networks and their connectivity with the nucleus accumbens. Reward deficits were associated with decreased connectivity between the nucleus accumbens and the default mode network and increased connectivity between the nucleus accumbens and the cingulo-opercular network. In addition, impaired reward responsivity was associated with default mode network hyperconnectivity and diminished connectivity between the default mode network and the cingulo-opercular network.These results emphasize the centrality of the nucleus accumbens in the pathophysiology of reward deficits and suggest that dissociable patterns of connectivity among large-scale networks are critical to the neurobiology of reward dysfunction across clinical diagnostic categories.
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    Common Dimensional Reward Deficits Across Mood and Psychotic Disorders: A Connectome-Wide Association Study” is a paper by Anup Sharma Daniel H. Wolf Rastko Ćirić Joseph W. Kable Tyler M. Moore Simon Vandekar Natalie Katchmar Aylin Daldal Kosha Ruparel Christos Davatzikos Mark A. Elliott Monica E. Calkins Russell T. Shinohara Danielle S. Bassett Theodore D. Satterthwaite published in 2017. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.