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Early life adversities are associated with lower expected value signaling in the adult brain

Sacu, Seda; Dubois, Magda; Hezemans, Frank H; Aggensteiner, Pascal-M; Monninger, Maximilian; Brandeis, Daniel; Banaschewski, Tobias; Hauser, Tobias U; Holz, Nathalie E (2024). Early life adversities are associated with lower expected value signaling in the adult brain. Biological Psychiatry:Epub ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: Early adverse experiences are assumed to affect fundamental processes of reward learning and decision making. However, computational neuroimaging studies investigating these circuits in the context of adversity are sparse and limited to studies conducted in adolescent samples, leaving the long-term effects unexplored.

Methods: Using data from a longitudinal birth cohort study (n = 156; 87 female), we investigated associations between adversities and computational markers of reward learning (i.e., expected value, prediction errors). At age 33 years, all participants completed a functional magnetic resonance imaging-based passive avoidance task. Psychopathology measures were collected at the time of functional magnetic resonance imaging investigation and during the COVID-19 pandemic. We applied a principal component analysis to capture common variations across 7 adversity measures. The resulting adversity factors (factor 1: postnatal psychosocial adversities and prenatal maternal smoking; factor 2: prenatal maternal stress and obstetric adversity; factor 3: lower maternal stimulation) were linked with psychopathology and neural responses in the core reward network using multiple regression analysis.

Results: We found that the adversity dimension primarily informed by lower maternal stimulation was linked to lower expected value representation in the right putamen, right nucleus accumbens, and anterior cingulate cortex. Expected value encoding in the right nucleus accumbens further mediated the relationship between this adversity dimension and psychopathology and predicted higher withdrawn symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Conclusions: Our results suggested that early adverse experiences in caregiver context might have a long-term disruptive effect on reward learning in reward-related brain regions, which can be associated with suboptimal decision making and thereby may increase the vulnerability of developing psychopathology.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > Psychiatric University Hospital Zurich > Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
04 Faculty of Medicine > Neuroscience Center Zurich
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Scopus Subject Areas:Life Sciences > Biological Psychiatry
Uncontrolled Keywords:Adverse experiences, Early-life stress, Expected value, Prediction error, Reinforcement learning, fMRI
Language:English
Date:16 April 2024
Deposited On:25 Jul 2024 10:36
Last Modified:26 Jul 2024 20:00
Publisher:Elsevier
ISSN:0006-3223
OA Status:Hybrid
Free access at:Publisher DOI. An embargo period may apply.
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2024.04.005
PubMed ID:38636886
Project Information:
  • Funder: German Research Foundation
  • Grant ID:
  • Project Title:
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  • Content: Published Version
  • Language: English
  • Licence: Creative Commons: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

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