Evidence Accumulation in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: the Role of Uncertainty and Monetary Reward on Perceptual Decision-Making Thresholds

被引:0
|
作者
Paula Banca
Martin D Vestergaard
Vladan Rankov
Kwangyeol Baek
Simon Mitchell
Tatyana Lapa
Miguel Castelo-Branco
Valerie Voon
机构
[1] University of Cambridge,Department of Psychiatry
[2] Addenbrooke’s Hospital,Department of Physiology
[3] PhD Programme in Experimental Biology and Biomedicine,undefined
[4] Center for Neuroscience and Cell Biology,undefined
[5] University of Coimbra,undefined
[6] Institute for Biomedical Imaging and Life Sciences,undefined
[7] University of Coimbra,undefined
[8] Development and Neuroscience,undefined
[9] University of Cambridge,undefined
[10] Behavioural and Clinical Neurosciences Institute,undefined
[11] University of Cambridge,undefined
[12] Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust,undefined
来源
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2015年 / 40卷
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摘要
The compulsive behaviour underlying obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) may be related to abnormalities in decision-making. The inability to commit to ultimate decisions, for example, patients unable to decide whether their hands are sufficiently clean, may reflect failures in accumulating sufficient evidence before a decision. Here we investigate the process of evidence accumulation in OCD in perceptual discrimination, hypothesizing enhanced evidence accumulation relative to healthy volunteers. Twenty-eight OCD patients and thirty-five controls were tested with a low-level visual perceptual task (random-dot-motion task, RDMT) and two response conflict control tasks. Regression analysis across different motion coherence levels and Hierarchical Drift Diffusion Modelling (HDDM) were used to characterize response strategies between groups in the RDMT. Patients required more evidence under high uncertainty perceptual contexts, as indexed by longer response time and higher decision boundaries. HDDM, which defines a decision when accumulated noisy evidence reaches a decision boundary, further showed slower drift rate towards the decision boundary reflecting poorer quality of evidence entering the decision process in patients under low uncertainty. With monetary incentives emphasizing speed and penalty for slower responses, patients decreased the decision thresholds relative to controls, accumulating less evidence in low uncertainty. These findings were unrelated to visual perceptual deficits and response conflict. This study provides evidence for impaired decision-formation processes in OCD, with a differential influence of high and low uncertainty contexts on evidence accumulation (decision threshold) and on the quality of evidence gathered (drift rates). It further emphasizes that OCD patients are sensitive to monetary incentives heightening speed in the speed-accuracy tradeoff, improving evidence accumulation.
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页码:1192 / 1202
页数:10
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