Cargando…

Learning to Obtain Reward, but Not Avoid Punishment, Is Affected by Presence of PTSD Symptoms in Male Veterans: Empirical Data and Computational Model

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms include behavioral avoidance which is acquired and tends to increase with time. This avoidance may represent a general learning bias; indeed, individuals with PTSD are often faster than controls on acquiring conditioned responses based on physiologicall...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Myers, Catherine E., Moustafa, Ahmed A., Sheynin, Jony, VanMeenen, Kirsten M., Gilbertson, Mark W., Orr, Scott P., Beck, Kevin D., Pang, Kevin C. H., Servatius, Richard J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3754989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24015254
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072508
_version_ 1782281944843681792
author Myers, Catherine E.
Moustafa, Ahmed A.
Sheynin, Jony
VanMeenen, Kirsten M.
Gilbertson, Mark W.
Orr, Scott P.
Beck, Kevin D.
Pang, Kevin C. H.
Servatius, Richard J.
author_facet Myers, Catherine E.
Moustafa, Ahmed A.
Sheynin, Jony
VanMeenen, Kirsten M.
Gilbertson, Mark W.
Orr, Scott P.
Beck, Kevin D.
Pang, Kevin C. H.
Servatius, Richard J.
author_sort Myers, Catherine E.
collection PubMed
description Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms include behavioral avoidance which is acquired and tends to increase with time. This avoidance may represent a general learning bias; indeed, individuals with PTSD are often faster than controls on acquiring conditioned responses based on physiologically-aversive feedback. However, it is not clear whether this learning bias extends to cognitive feedback, or to learning from both reward and punishment. Here, male veterans with self-reported current, severe PTSD symptoms (PTSS group) or with few or no PTSD symptoms (control group) completed a probabilistic classification task that included both reward-based and punishment-based trials, where feedback could take the form of reward, punishment, or an ambiguous “no-feedback” outcome that could signal either successful avoidance of punishment or failure to obtain reward. The PTSS group outperformed the control group in total points obtained; the PTSS group specifically performed better than the control group on reward-based trials, with no difference on punishment-based trials. To better understand possible mechanisms underlying observed performance, we used a reinforcement learning model of the task, and applied maximum likelihood estimation techniques to derive estimated parameters describing individual participants’ behavior. Estimations of the reinforcement value of the no-feedback outcome were significantly greater in the control group than the PTSS group, suggesting that the control group was more likely to value this outcome as positively reinforcing (i.e., signaling successful avoidance of punishment). This is consistent with the control group’s generally poorer performance on reward trials, where reward feedback was to be obtained in preference to the no-feedback outcome. Differences in the interpretation of ambiguous feedback may contribute to the facilitated reinforcement learning often observed in PTSD patients, and may in turn provide new insight into how pathological behaviors are acquired and maintained in PTSD.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3754989
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-37549892013-09-06 Learning to Obtain Reward, but Not Avoid Punishment, Is Affected by Presence of PTSD Symptoms in Male Veterans: Empirical Data and Computational Model Myers, Catherine E. Moustafa, Ahmed A. Sheynin, Jony VanMeenen, Kirsten M. Gilbertson, Mark W. Orr, Scott P. Beck, Kevin D. Pang, Kevin C. H. Servatius, Richard J. PLoS One Research Article Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms include behavioral avoidance which is acquired and tends to increase with time. This avoidance may represent a general learning bias; indeed, individuals with PTSD are often faster than controls on acquiring conditioned responses based on physiologically-aversive feedback. However, it is not clear whether this learning bias extends to cognitive feedback, or to learning from both reward and punishment. Here, male veterans with self-reported current, severe PTSD symptoms (PTSS group) or with few or no PTSD symptoms (control group) completed a probabilistic classification task that included both reward-based and punishment-based trials, where feedback could take the form of reward, punishment, or an ambiguous “no-feedback” outcome that could signal either successful avoidance of punishment or failure to obtain reward. The PTSS group outperformed the control group in total points obtained; the PTSS group specifically performed better than the control group on reward-based trials, with no difference on punishment-based trials. To better understand possible mechanisms underlying observed performance, we used a reinforcement learning model of the task, and applied maximum likelihood estimation techniques to derive estimated parameters describing individual participants’ behavior. Estimations of the reinforcement value of the no-feedback outcome were significantly greater in the control group than the PTSS group, suggesting that the control group was more likely to value this outcome as positively reinforcing (i.e., signaling successful avoidance of punishment). This is consistent with the control group’s generally poorer performance on reward trials, where reward feedback was to be obtained in preference to the no-feedback outcome. Differences in the interpretation of ambiguous feedback may contribute to the facilitated reinforcement learning often observed in PTSD patients, and may in turn provide new insight into how pathological behaviors are acquired and maintained in PTSD. Public Library of Science 2013-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC3754989/ /pubmed/24015254 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072508 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Myers, Catherine E.
Moustafa, Ahmed A.
Sheynin, Jony
VanMeenen, Kirsten M.
Gilbertson, Mark W.
Orr, Scott P.
Beck, Kevin D.
Pang, Kevin C. H.
Servatius, Richard J.
Learning to Obtain Reward, but Not Avoid Punishment, Is Affected by Presence of PTSD Symptoms in Male Veterans: Empirical Data and Computational Model
title Learning to Obtain Reward, but Not Avoid Punishment, Is Affected by Presence of PTSD Symptoms in Male Veterans: Empirical Data and Computational Model
title_full Learning to Obtain Reward, but Not Avoid Punishment, Is Affected by Presence of PTSD Symptoms in Male Veterans: Empirical Data and Computational Model
title_fullStr Learning to Obtain Reward, but Not Avoid Punishment, Is Affected by Presence of PTSD Symptoms in Male Veterans: Empirical Data and Computational Model
title_full_unstemmed Learning to Obtain Reward, but Not Avoid Punishment, Is Affected by Presence of PTSD Symptoms in Male Veterans: Empirical Data and Computational Model
title_short Learning to Obtain Reward, but Not Avoid Punishment, Is Affected by Presence of PTSD Symptoms in Male Veterans: Empirical Data and Computational Model
title_sort learning to obtain reward, but not avoid punishment, is affected by presence of ptsd symptoms in male veterans: empirical data and computational model
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3754989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24015254
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072508
work_keys_str_mv AT myerscatherinee learningtoobtainrewardbutnotavoidpunishmentisaffectedbypresenceofptsdsymptomsinmaleveteransempiricaldataandcomputationalmodel
AT moustafaahmeda learningtoobtainrewardbutnotavoidpunishmentisaffectedbypresenceofptsdsymptomsinmaleveteransempiricaldataandcomputationalmodel
AT sheyninjony learningtoobtainrewardbutnotavoidpunishmentisaffectedbypresenceofptsdsymptomsinmaleveteransempiricaldataandcomputationalmodel
AT vanmeenenkirstenm learningtoobtainrewardbutnotavoidpunishmentisaffectedbypresenceofptsdsymptomsinmaleveteransempiricaldataandcomputationalmodel
AT gilbertsonmarkw learningtoobtainrewardbutnotavoidpunishmentisaffectedbypresenceofptsdsymptomsinmaleveteransempiricaldataandcomputationalmodel
AT orrscottp learningtoobtainrewardbutnotavoidpunishmentisaffectedbypresenceofptsdsymptomsinmaleveteransempiricaldataandcomputationalmodel
AT beckkevind learningtoobtainrewardbutnotavoidpunishmentisaffectedbypresenceofptsdsymptomsinmaleveteransempiricaldataandcomputationalmodel
AT pangkevinch learningtoobtainrewardbutnotavoidpunishmentisaffectedbypresenceofptsdsymptomsinmaleveteransempiricaldataandcomputationalmodel
AT servatiusrichardj learningtoobtainrewardbutnotavoidpunishmentisaffectedbypresenceofptsdsymptomsinmaleveteransempiricaldataandcomputationalmodel