Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
879497 | Current Opinion in Psychology | 2015 | 5 Pages |
•Dysfunctional reward processing is central to the pathophysiology of depression.•Behavioral impairments in depression vary across reward sub-processes.•A distributed network of brain regions and pathways mediates reward processing.•Identifying specific reward-related dysfunctions may transform clinical care.
Anhedonia — diminished pleasure and/or decreased reactivity to pleasurable stimuli — is a core feature of depression that frequently persists after treatment. As a result, extensive effort has been directed toward characterizing the psychological and biological processes that mediate dysfunctional reward processing in depression. Reward processing can be parsed into sub-components that include motivation, reinforcement learning, and hedonic capacity, which, according to preclinical and neuroimaging evidence, involve partially dissociable brain systems. In line with this, recent findings indicate that behavioral impairments and neural abnormalities in depression vary across distinct reward-related constructs. Ultimately, improved understanding of precise reward-related dysfunctions in depression promises to improve diagnostic and therapeutic efforts in depression.