SA69. Neural Basis of Trust Deficits in Schizophrenia: An fMRI Investigation

  • Jacob A
  • Rao N
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Abstract

Background: Trust and reciprocity are an integral part of human social interactions. One of the characteristic features of schizophrenia, paranoid delusions, indicates an underlying lack of trust in other human beings. However, only a few studies have examined the neural basis of trust defcits in schizophrenia using fMRI. Method(s): Fourteen patients with schizophrenia (age: 33.50 + 6.01, education: 14.86 + 1.83) and 14 healthy controls (age: 24.39 + 3.79, education: 16.64 +/- 2.82) participated in the study. Participants underwent an fMRI scan while engaged in a modifed version of trust game. Participants played the role of investors and were told that in 12 trials they would interact with a human counterpart (trustee) while in the other 12 trials they would invest in a lottery. Each participant was endowed with INR 12 in each trial. In each trial, participants had the option of keeping all the money to himself or herself or investing/sharing a part of it (INR 4, 8, or 12). The images were preprocessed and analyzed using SPM 12. Images were corrected for motion and time of acquisition, coregistered to the respective structural images, segmented, normalized, and smoothed. The contrasts comparing decision phases of human and lottery trials were modeled at the individual subject level. For the second-level analysis, the frst-level contrasts were entered into a 2-sample t-test to compare patient and healthy control groups. The results were thresholded at P

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Jacob, A., & Rao, N. (2017). SA69. Neural Basis of Trust Deficits in Schizophrenia: An fMRI Investigation. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 43(suppl_1), S138–S138. https://doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbx023.068

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