Ventral striatal activity links adversity and reward processing in children |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, 361 Windermere Road, Westminster Hall, London, Ontario N6A 3K7, Canada;2. Center for Adaptive Rationality (ARC), Max-Planck-Institute for Human Development, Berlin 14195, Germany;3. The Brain and Mind Institute, Natural Sciences Centre, Room 120, Western University London, Ontario, Canada, N6A 5B7 |
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Abstract: | Adversity impacts many aspects of psychological and physical development including reward-based learning and decision-making. Mechanisms relating adversity and reward processing in children, however, remain unclear. Here, we show that adversity is associated with potentiated learning from positive outcomes and impulsive decision-making, but unrelated to learning from negative outcomes. We then show via functional magnetic resonance imaging that the link between adversity and reward processing is partially mediated by differences in ventral striatal response to rewards. The findings suggest that early-life adversity is associated with alterations in the brain’s sensitivity to rewards accounting, in part, for the link between adversity and altered reward processing in children. |
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Keywords: | Delay discounting Early-life adversity fMRI Impulsivity Ventral striatum |
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