Background: Abnormal social decision-making is prominent in schizophrenia. Antipsychotic medication often improves interpersonal functioning but this action is poorly understood. Neuroeconomic paradigms are an effective method of investigating social decision-making in psychiatric disorders that can be adapted for use with neuroimaging. Using a neuroeconomic approach, it has been shown that healthy humans reproducibly alter their behavior in different contexts, including exhibiting loss aversion: a higher sensitivity to loss outcomes compared to gains of the same magnitude.
Methods: Here, using a novel loss aversion task and fMRI, we tested three hypotheses: controls exhibiting normal behavioral loss aversion show changes in brain activity consistent with previous studies on healthy subjects; behavioral loss aversion is significantly reduced in schizophrenia and associated with abnormal activity in the same brain regions activated in controls during loss aversion behavior; and for the patient group alone, there is a significant correlation between increased psychotic symptoms, blunted loss aversion and abnormal brain activity. These hypotheses were tested in patients with schizophrenia and healthy controls using a loss aversion paradigm and fMRI.
Results: The results support the hypotheses, with patients exhibiting significantly blunted behavioral loss aversion compared to controls. Controls showed a robust loss aversion brain activation pattern in the medial temporal lobe, insula and dopaminergic-linked areas, which was blunted in schizophrenia.
Conclusions: Our results are consistent with blunted loss aversion being a reproducible feature of schizophrenia, likely due to abnormal dopaminergic and medial temporal lobe function, suggesting a route by which antipsychotics could influence interpersonal behavior.