International Meeting for Autism Research: Functional MRI of reward circuitry in Autism: The effects of different reward types

Functional MRI of reward circuitry in Autism: The effects of different reward types

Friday, May 13, 2011: 4:15 PM
Douglas Pavilion A (Manchester Grand Hyatt)
3:45 PM
S. Y. Bookheimer1, D. Shirinyan2, A. A. Scott-Van Zeeland3 and M. Dapretto1, (1)Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, (2)UCLA, Center for Autism Research and Treatment, Los Angeles, CA, United States, (3)University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA
Background: The social motivation hypothesis of autism holds that a decrease in ASD individuals' fundamental drive to engage in social interactions sets up a cascade of events culminating in lack of social experience, decreased learning of socially cued information, and ultimately a failure to develop expertise in social cognitive skills such as face processing. A potential neural mechanism for social motivation deficit is decreased or abnormal responsiveness in the brain’s reward circuitry, specifically networks involving the ventral striatum/accumbens region. 

Objectives: To characterize reward circuitry function in autism with fMRI. 

Methods: In a series of fMRI studies we examined fMRI responses to social rewards (smiling faces), non-social rewards (money) and individual-specific rewards based on each subject’s special interest. We also examined the extent to which subjects learned implicit but deterministic associations with reward mediation. FMRI scanning was conducted on a Siemens 3Tesla Trio system, using an implicit learning paradigm based on Knowlton’s Probabilistic Classification task. Subjects were shown a series of fractal-like images and pressed a button to indicate whether each item belonged to “1” or “2”. In Exp. 1 (16 ASD, 16 TD; VanZeeland et al, 2010), subjects received information only feedback (correct or incorrect), feedback with a social reward (smiling face vs. pouting face), or monetary feedback (money cure or crossed-out money icon). In Exp 2 (D. Shirinyan, IMFAR 2011), subjects (19TD, 17ASD) were first questioned about their specific interests; a picture of their desired reward (or a crossed out picture of it) and a control picture from another subject’s reward were used to provide feedback

Results: In comparison to typically developing children, those with ASD showed reduced responses in the VS to social rewards, and a non-significant reduction for monetary rewards. In contrast, children with ASD showed enhanced VS responses to rewards associated with their specific interest compared to TD children.  

Conclusions: These results present a more complex picture of reward circuitry dysfunction in autism, suggesting a model of restricted, item-specific reward responsiveness that may be excessive, while responses to other rewards, including primary reinforcers, is reduced. This pattern is consistent with a more general deficit in information processing in autism characterized by increased local processing and decreased implicit/extraneous of background processing, affecting reward as well as other systems.

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