Reward anticipation in ventral striatum and individual sensitivity to reward: A pilot study of a child-friendly fMRI task

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Abstract

Reward processing has been implicated in developmental disorders. However, the classic task to probe reward anticipation, the monetary incentive delay task, has an abstract coding of reward and no storyline and may therefore be less appropriate for use with developmental populations. We modified the task to create a version appropriate for use with children. We investigated whether this child-friendly version could elicit ventral striatal activation during reward anticipation in typically developing children and young adolescents (aged 9.5-14.5). In addition, we tested whether our performance-based measure of reward sensitivity was associated with anticipatory activity in ventral striatum. Reward anticipation was related to activity in bilateral ventral striatum. Moreover, we found an association between individual reward sensitivity and activity in ventral striatum. We conclude that this task assesses ventral striatal activity in a child-friendly paradigm. The combination with a performance-based measure of reward sensitivity potentially makes the task a powerful tool for developmental imaging studies of reward processing.

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Van Hulst, B. M., De Zeeuw, P., Lupas, K., Bos, D. J., Neggers, S. F. W., & Durston, S. (2015). Reward anticipation in ventral striatum and individual sensitivity to reward: A pilot study of a child-friendly fMRI task. PLoS ONE, 10(11). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0142413

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