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Neural and self‐reported reward responsiveness are associated with dispositional affectivity and emotion dysregulation in adolescents with evidence for convergent and incremental validity

Evelin A. Zubovics, Richárd Fiáth, Alexandra Rádosi, Bea Pászthy, János Réthelyi, István Ulbert, Nóra Bunford

2020Psychophysiology14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Adolescence is a developmental period characterized by heightened reward sensitivity which, in turn, confers risk for pertinent negative outcomes, underscoring the need to better understand biological bases and behavioral correlates of reward responsiveness during this developmental phase. Our goals in the current study were to examine, in a sample of 43 typically developing adolescents ( M age = 15.67 years; SD = 1.01; 32.6% boys), (1) evidence of convergent validity between neural and self‐report reward responsiveness, (2) associations between neural reward responsiveness and self‐report dispositional affectivity and emotion dysregulation (ED) and (3) evidence of incremental validity of self‐report beyond neural reward responsiveness in predicting affectivity and ED. During electroencephalography (EEG), adolescents completed two experimental paradigms probing event‐related potential (ERP) indices of reward anticipation and initial responsiveness to reward attainment. Following EEG, they completed self‐report measures of reward responsiveness, affectivity, and ED. Findings indicated some evidence of convergent validity between enhanced ERP indices of reward anticipation and initial response to reward and greater reinforcement sensitivity; that ERP indices of both reward responsiveness aspects predicted lower negative affectivity and less ED; and evidence of incremental validity of self‐report beyond neural reward responsiveness in predicting outcomes. Results underscore the utility of a multi‐method framework in assessing adolescent reward responsiveness and support the relevance of reward responsiveness in explaining individual differences in dispositional affectivity and ED.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyAnticipation (artificial intelligence)Positive affectivityNegative affectivityElectroencephalographyDevelopmental psychologyBrain stimulation rewardReward systemConvergent validityClinical psychologyCognitive psychologyPsychometricsNeurosciencePersonalitySocial psychologyDopamineArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceNucleus accumbensInternal consistencyNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesHeart Rate Variability and Autonomic ControlAnxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes
Neural and self‐reported reward responsiveness are associated with dispositional affectivity and emotion dysregulation in adolescents with evidence for convergent and incremental validity | Litcius