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Altered learning under uncertainty in unmedicated mood and anxiety disorders

Cited 61 time in Web of Science Cited 67 time in Scopus
Authors

Aylward, Jessica; Valton, Vincent; Ahn, Woo-Young; Bond, Rebecca L.; Dayan, Peter; Roiser, Jonathan P.; Robinson, Oliver J.

Issue Date
2019-10
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Nature Human Behaviour, Vol.3 No.10, pp.1116-1123
Abstract
Anxiety is characterized by altered responses under uncertain conditions, but the precise mechanism by which uncertainty changes the behaviour of anxious individuals is unclear. Here we probe the computational basis of learning under uncertainty in healthy individuals and individuals suffering from a mix of mood and anxiety disorders. Participants were asked to choose between four competing slot machines with fluctuating reward and punishment outcomes during safety and stress. We predicted that anxious individuals under stress would learn faster about punishments and exhibit choices that were more affected by those punishments, thus formalizing our predictions as parameters in reinforcement learning accounts of behaviour. Overall, the data suggest that anxious individuals are quicker to update their behaviour in response to negative outcomes (increased punishment learning rates). When treating anxiety, it may therefore be more fruitful to encourage anxious individuals to integrate information over longer horizons when bad things happen, rather than try to blunt their responses to negative outcomes.
ISSN
2397-3374
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/198155
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-019-0628-0
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