PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
Psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder are chronic conditions
characterized by pervasive cognitive impairment, hallucinations, delusions, aberrant affective processing, and
decreases in reward/goal pursuit. Listed as the 8th leading cause of disability world-wide, psychotic disorders
are also associated with substantial financial burden (e.g. national cost of $155.7 billion in 2013). Psychosis
symptom severity has been associated with poor decision-making with respect to processing risk and reward.
While typically thought of as detrimental, risk-taking in moderation is actually beneficial, as it often results in
gaining new or additional rewards or resources (i.e., nothing ventured, nothing gained). This inability to
optimize decision-making in psychotic disorders has been associated with more severe symptomatology,
suggesting a possible target for remediating the burden of the illness.
Leveraging functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and neurocomputational modeling, the
proposed research will determine whether decreased activation and connectivity between the dorsal anterior
cingulate cortex and other brain regions is associated with disadvantageous decision-making in psychotic
disorders. Specifically, it will determine whether this decision-making deficit is best accounted for by risk
perception or reward processing circuits separately, or the combination of these circuits. It is hypothesized that
psychotic disorders will be associated with decreased neural activation in, and connectivity between, circuits
that subserve risk-perception, such as the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, anterior insula, dorsolateral
prefrontal cortex, and reward processing, such as the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, striatum, and
orbitofrontal cortex. Neurocomputational modeling will isolate three critical risk-processing variables that
cannot be identified via behavioral data alone and identify how differences in task behavior implicates
contributions from specific brain regions.
The proposed plan will provide targeted training in advanced neuroscience methods, computational
modeling, and clinical translational science. Altogether, the proposal will establish the critical foundation
necessary to establish a program of research integrating clinical psychological science of psychotic disorders
with neuroimaging and computational modeling. Long-term this will lead to advances in our understanding of
the neural mechanisms contributing to the etiology of psychotic disorders, which may, in turn, be explored as
novel targets of intervention.