2015
DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbv089
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Effort-Based Decision-Making Paradigms for Clinical Trials in Schizophrenia: Part 1—Psychometric Characteristics of 5 Paradigms

Abstract: Impairments in willingness to exert effort contribute to the motivational deficits characteristic of the negative symptoms of schizophrenia. The current study evaluated the psychometric properties of 5 new or adapted paradigms to determine their suitability for use in clinical trials of schizophrenia. This study included 94 clinically stable participants with schizophrenia and 40 healthy controls. The effort-based decision-making battery was administered twice to the schizophrenia group (baseline, 4-week retes… Show more

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Cited by 152 publications
(146 citation statements)
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References 32 publications
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“…Interestingly, although some studies have detected an overall decrease in effort expenditure (Hartmann et al, 2015;McCarthy et al, 2016;Wolf et al, 2014), the most consistent group differences observed across studies have implicated deficits in effort allocation rather than effort expenditure (Barch et al, 2014;Gold et al, 2013;Horan et al, 2015;Reddy et al, 2015). That is, schizophrenia patients may not choose to expend less effort overall, but they appear to be significantly less sensitive to reward-related information when choosing when to expend effort.…”
Section: Reduced Motivation and Psychomotor Function In Psychiatric Dmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Interestingly, although some studies have detected an overall decrease in effort expenditure (Hartmann et al, 2015;McCarthy et al, 2016;Wolf et al, 2014), the most consistent group differences observed across studies have implicated deficits in effort allocation rather than effort expenditure (Barch et al, 2014;Gold et al, 2013;Horan et al, 2015;Reddy et al, 2015). That is, schizophrenia patients may not choose to expend less effort overall, but they appear to be significantly less sensitive to reward-related information when choosing when to expend effort.…”
Section: Reduced Motivation and Psychomotor Function In Psychiatric Dmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In schizophrenia, an even greater number of studies have found evidence for effort-related abnormalities using a variety of effort-tasks (Barch et al, 2014;Fervaha et al, 2013;Gold et al, 2013;Hartmann et al, 2015;McCarthy et al, 2016;Reddy et al, 2015;Strauss et al, 2016). Interestingly, although some studies have detected an overall decrease in effort expenditure (Hartmann et al, 2015;McCarthy et al, 2016;Wolf et al, 2014), the most consistent group differences observed across studies have implicated deficits in effort allocation rather than effort expenditure (Barch et al, 2014;Gold et al, 2013;Horan et al, 2015;Reddy et al, 2015).…”
Section: Reduced Motivation and Psychomotor Function In Psychiatric Dmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This cognitive effort task has been reverse translated for use in humans and is described in detail as a perceptual effort task elsewhere in this issue. 47,48 Although largely consistent with the rodent task, the difficulty level for patients was titrated based on the patients' baseline abilities. Future studies will be required to demonstrate the cross-species validity of findings for this task.…”
Section: Reward Valuation From Physical And/or Cognitive Effort Tasksmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In understanding these motivational deficits it is useful to consider that acting on motivation by allocating effort requires a cost-benefit assessment of task difficulty and reward magnitude (Gendolla and Krüsken, 2002). Individuals with schizophrenia have demonstrated reduced effort allocation or impaired effort-cost computations (Gold et al, 2013) in laboratory tasks such that, compared to healthy controls, they are less likely to choose high-effort options when probability or magnitude of reward is increasing (Barch et al, 2014; Fervaha et al, 2013; Gold et al, 2013; Reddy et al, 2015; Treadway et al, 2015). These findings suggest that individuals with schizophrenia do not display a complete failure to respond to reward, but that they often have difficulty with anticipatory pleasure and recruiting effort to pursue rewards in trials with the greatest probability of reward or reward magnitude.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%