All Relations between Depression and reward

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Yuuki Uchida, Takatoshi Hikida, Manabu Honda, Yuichi Yamashit. Heterogeneous appetite patterns in depression: computational modeling of nutritional interoception, reward processing, and decision-making. Frontiers in human neuroscience. vol 18. 2024-12-31. PMID:39736895. heterogeneous appetite patterns in depression: computational modeling of nutritional interoception, reward processing, and decision-making. 2024-12-31 2025-01-02 Not clear
Yuuki Uchida, Takatoshi Hikida, Manabu Honda, Yuichi Yamashit. Heterogeneous appetite patterns in depression: computational modeling of nutritional interoception, reward processing, and decision-making. Frontiers in human neuroscience. vol 18. 2024-12-31. PMID:39736895. neurophysiological studies have associated changes in appetite in depression with altered activation of the mesolimbic dopamine system and interoceptive regions, such as the insular cortex, suggesting that disruptions in reward processing and interoception drive changes in nutrient homeostasis and appetite. 2024-12-31 2025-01-02 Not clear
Yuuki Uchida, Takatoshi Hikida, Manabu Honda, Yuichi Yamashit. Heterogeneous appetite patterns in depression: computational modeling of nutritional interoception, reward processing, and decision-making. Frontiers in human neuroscience. vol 18. 2024-12-31. PMID:39736895. specifically, reduced interoception led to decreased reward system activity and increased punishment, mirroring the neuroimaging study findings of decreased appetite in depression. 2024-12-31 2025-01-02 Not clear
Award for Distinguished Scientific Early Career Contributions to Psychology: Anna E. F. Weinberg. The American psychologist. vol 79. issue 9. 2024-12-23. PMID:39715381. her programmatic work has shaped our understanding of reward-related neural activity evident in event-related potentials, and how individual differences in reward responsiveness can function mechanistically in the etiopathogenesis of depression. 2024-12-23 2024-12-26 Not clear
Nili Solomonov, Lindsay W Victoria, Zareen Mir, Dustin Phan, Matthew J Hoptman, Patricia Areán, George S Alexopoulos, Faith M Gunnin. Brain Activation Associated With Response to Psychotherapies for Late-Life Depression: A Task-Based fMRI Study. The American journal of geriatric psychiatry : official journal of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry. 2024-12-20. PMID:39706745. this study examined how activation of key regions of the salience network, default mode network and reward systems is associated with response to psychotherapies for late-life depression. 2024-12-20 2024-12-24 Not clear
Bekhbat Mandakh, Li Zhihao, Boadie W Dunlop, Michael T Treadway, Neeti D Mehta, Kate P Revill, Michael J Lucido, Hong Changdo, Ashchi Andrea, Evanthia C Wommack, David R Goldsmith, Haroon Ebrahim, Andrew H Miller, Jennifer C Felge. Sustained effects of repeated levodopa (L-DOPA) administration on reward circuitry, effort-based motivation, and anhedonia in depressed patients with higher inflammation. Brain, behavior, and immunity. 2024-12-18. PMID:39694342. inflammatory biomarkers like c-reactive protein (crp) are elevated in a subset of patients with depression and associated with lower functional connectivity (fc) in a ventral striatum (vs) to ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmpfc) reward circuit and symptoms of anhedonia. 2024-12-18 2024-12-21 Not clear
Stefanie L Sequeira, Julianne M Griffith, T H Stanley Seah, Kiera M James, Cecile D Ladouceur, Jennifer S Sil. Real-World Social Reward Processes are Linked to Momentary Positive Affect in Adolescent Girls. Research on child and adolescent psychopathology. 2024-12-12. PMID:39666125. reduced interest or reward in peer interactions may contribute to social anxiety and depression in girls through effects on positive affect (pa), though associations between social anhedonia and momentary pa have yet to be tested. 2024-12-12 2024-12-14 Not clear
Stefanie L Sequeira, Julianne M Griffith, T H Stanley Seah, Kiera M James, Cecile D Ladouceur, Jennifer S Sil. Real-World Social Reward Processes are Linked to Momentary Positive Affect in Adolescent Girls. Research on child and adolescent psychopathology. 2024-12-12. PMID:39666125. the present study used ecological momentary assessment to test such associations between real-world anticipatory social reward (i.e., interest in upcoming peer events), consummatory social reward (i.e., reward extracted from positive peer interactions), and momentary pa in a sample of 129 girls (aged 11-13 years) who were oversampled for high shy/fearful temperament, a risk factor for future social anxiety and depression. 2024-12-12 2024-12-14 Not clear
Xiaoning Zhao, Jinsheng Hu, Meng Liu, Qi Li, Qingshuo Yan. Immunity for counterproductive attentional capture by reward signals among individuals with depressive symptoms. Behaviour research and therapy. vol 184. 2024-12-12. PMID:39667258. this study aimed to investigate the characteristics of attentional capture by reward signals in individuals with depression during classical conditioning. 2024-12-12 2024-12-22 Not clear
Arzoo Pannu, Ramesh K Goya. The Potential Role of Dopamine Pathways in the Pathophysiology of Depression: Current Advances and Future Aspects. CNS & neurological disorders drug targets. 2024-12-06. PMID:39639477. the mlp, which is key to reward processing, is linked to anhedonia, a primary depression symptom. 2024-12-06 2024-12-08 Not clear
Lilian Y Li, Lauren N Grzelak, Randy P Auerbach, Stewart A Shankma. Siblings' similarity in neural responses to loss reflects mechanisms of familial transmission for depression. Journal of psychiatric research. vol 181. 2024-12-05. PMID:39637720. consequently, to shed light on the neural mechanism underlying familial transmission of depression, the present study tested whether neural similarity in response to reward and loss, indexed by inter-subject correlation (isc), was associated with major depressive disorder (mdd) diagnosis, depression symptom severity, and relationship quality in sibling pairs. 2024-12-05 2024-12-08 Not clear
Lilian Y Li, Lauren N Grzelak, Randy P Auerbach, Stewart A Shankma. Siblings' similarity in neural responses to loss reflects mechanisms of familial transmission for depression. Journal of psychiatric research. vol 181. 2024-12-05. PMID:39637720. same-sex, full-sibling pairs (n = 108 pairs) with a wide range of depression severity separately completed a monetary reward task during electroencephalography acquisition. 2024-12-05 2024-12-08 Not clear
Eric An, Desiree R Delgadillo, Jennifer Yang, Rishabh Agarwal, Jennifer S Labus, Shrey Pawar, Madeline Lietman, Lisa A Kilpatrick, Ravi R Bhatt, Priten Vora, Allison Vaughan, Tien S Dong, Arpana Gupt. Stress-Resilience Impacts Psychological Wellbeing: Evidence from Brain-Gut Microbiome Interactions. Nature. Mental health. vol 2. issue 8. 2024-12-02. PMID:39620114. data integration analysis using latent components showed the high resilience phenotype was associated with lower depression and anxiety symptoms, higher frequency of bacterial transcriptomes (related to environmental adaptation, genetic propagation, energy metabolism, anti-inflammation), increased metabolites (n-acetylglutamate; dimethylglycine), and cortical signatures (increased resting state functional connectivity between reward circuits and sensorimotor networks; decreased grey matter volume and white matter tracts within the emotion regulation network). 2024-12-02 2024-12-06 Not clear
Yi Cui, Ling Li, Xiaofei Mao, Jingzhou Xu, Hao Wang, Shuyu Xu, Tong S. Psychological problems and related factors among primary healthcare staff in major cities in China during the COVID-19 pandemic. Scientific reports. vol 14. issue 1. 2024-12-02. PMID:39622928. and factors associated with depression were being female, advanced education, expecting psychological interventions, expecting vacations as a reward, and expecting financial rewards. 2024-12-02 2024-12-06 Not clear
Christopher J H Pirrung, Garima Singh, Jeremy Hogeveen, Davin Quinn, James F Cavanag. Hypoactivation of ventromedial frontal cortex in major depressive disorder: an MEG study of the Reward Positivity. Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging. 2024-11-17. PMID:39551134. we previously proposed that the rewp is a temporal nexus for multiple dimensions of reward value, and that a diminished rewp in depression might only reflect a deficit in some of these features. 2024-11-17 2024-11-22 Not clear
Gia-Huy L Hoang, Kent G Hecker, Connor Maxey, Ford Burles, Olave E Krigolson, Daniel C Kopala-Sible. The reward positivity as a predictor of first lifetime onsets of depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation in high-risk adolescents. Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging. 2024-11-11. PMID:39528044. reduced reward positivity (rewp), an electroencephalography (eeg) marker elicited by feedback indicating reward, has been associated with an increased risk for depression in adolescence. 2024-11-11 2024-11-17 Not clear
Xiaolu Zhang, Jake Valeri, Mahmoud A Eladawi, Barbara Gisabella, Michael R Garrett, Eric J Vallender, Robert McCullumsmith, Harry Pantazopoulos, Sinead M O'Donova. Transcriptomic Analysis of the Amygdala in Subjects with Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder and Major Depressive Disorder Reveals Differentially Altered Metabolic Pathways. Schizophrenia bulletin. 2024-11-11. PMID:39526318. the amygdala, crucial for mood, anxiety, fear, and reward regulation, shows neuroanatomical and molecular divergence in psychiatric disorders like schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and major depression. 2024-11-11 2024-11-17 human
Matthew Mattoni, Holly Sullivan-Toole, Thomas M Olin. Development of Self-Reported Reward Responsiveness and Inhibitory Control and the Role of Clinical and Neural Predictors. Journal of personality. 2024-11-09. PMID:39520133. understanding the development of adolescent reward responsiveness and inhibitory control is important as they are implicated in key outcomes, such as depression. 2024-11-09 2024-11-17 Not clear
Esther E Palacios-Barrios, Kunal Patel, Jamie L Hanso. Early life interpersonal stress and depression: Social reward processing as a potential mediator. Progress in neuro-psychopharmacology & biological psychiatry. 2024-11-04. PMID:39492470. early life interpersonal stress and depression: social reward processing as a potential mediator. 2024-11-04 2024-11-06 Not clear
Esther E Palacios-Barrios, Kunal Patel, Jamie L Hanso. Early life interpersonal stress and depression: Social reward processing as a potential mediator. Progress in neuro-psychopharmacology & biological psychiatry. 2024-11-04. PMID:39492470. the current review synthesizes these two disparate, yet related, bodies of literature examining the relations between a) elis and neurobehavioral alterations in social reward processing; and b) behavioral and neural processing of social reward in depression. 2024-11-04 2024-11-06 Not clear