Forgetting the best when predicting the worst: Preliminary observations on neural circuit function in adolescent social anxiety

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dcn.2015.03.002Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Altered learning-related brain function may promote adolescent social anxiety (SA).

  • During fMRI SA/non-SA adolescents and adults predicted and received peer feedback.

  • SA youth had altered frontostriatal activity for pleasantly surprising feedback.

  • Alterations related to impaired recall of feedback in SA youth, not adults.

  • Early frontostriatal dysfunction may promote biases that maintain long-term anxiety.

ABSTRACT

Social anxiety disorder typically begins in adolescence, a sensitive period for brain development, when increased complexity and salience of peer relationships requires novel forms of social learning. Disordered social learning in adolescence may explain how brain dysfunction promotes social anxiety. Socially anxious adolescents (n = 15) and adults (n = 19) and non-anxious adolescents (n = 24) and adults (n = 32) predicted, then received, social feedback from high and low-value peers while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). A surprise recall task assessed memory biases for feedback. Neural correlates of social evaluation prediction errors (PEs) were assessed by comparing engagement to expected and unexpected positive and negative feedback. For socially anxious adolescents, but not adults or healthy participants of either age group, PEs elicited heightened striatal activity and negative fronto-striatal functional connectivity. This occurred selectively to unexpected positive feedback from high-value peers and corresponded with impaired memory for social feedback. While impaired memory also occurred in socially-anxious adults, this impairment was unrelated to brain-based PE activity. Thus, social anxiety in adolescence may relate to altered neural correlates of PEs that contribute to impaired learning about social feedback. Small samples necessitate replication. Nevertheless, results suggest that the relationship between learning and fronto-striatal function may attenuate as development progresses.

Keywords

Development
Striatum
Medial prefrontal cortex
Prediction error
Peer feedback
Learning

Cited by (0)

Available online 23 March 2015