Trust and general risk-taking in externalizing adolescent inpatients versus non-externalizing psychiatric controls.
Externalising disorder
conduct disorder
decision making
social reward
trust game
Journal
Scandinavian journal of child and adolescent psychiatry and psychology
ISSN: 2245-8875
Titre abrégé: Scand J Child Adolesc Psychiatr Psychol
Pays: Poland
ID NLM: 101608905
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
2019
2019
Historique:
entrez:
1
2
2021
pubmed:
30
5
2019
medline:
30
5
2019
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
Interpersonal trust is an important target for the conceptualization, identification, and treatment of psychiatric disorders marked by interpersonal difficulties. A core feature of adolescent externalising disorders is interpersonal impairment. However, research investigating trust is scarce. A relatively novel approach for studying trust in psychopathology is through examination of social decision making using behavioural economic games. To employ a modified trust game in order to determine whether externalising adolescents exhibit perturbed decision making in social and/or nonsocial contexts. Externalising inpatient adolescents ( Externalising adolescents showed a limited increase in trust investments, compared to a significant increase in lottery investments, across early game trials relative to psychiatric controls. This significant three-way interaction between experimental group, game condition, and trials became most evident at the second trial of games. Between-group differences on trust investments were non-significant. However, externalising adolescents invested significantly less in the trust relative to lottery condition, an effect unobserved in psychiatric controls. This study tentatively suggests that adolescent externalising disorders may be associated with an insensitivity to normative social exchange which may arise, in part, from a lack of anticipated co-player reciprocity. It is not the level of trust that may distinguish externalising adolescents but perhaps the form of which the trust exchange takes shape. Conclusions are tempered by the fact that the employed trust game did not include feedback in the form of co-player repayments.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
Interpersonal trust is an important target for the conceptualization, identification, and treatment of psychiatric disorders marked by interpersonal difficulties. A core feature of adolescent externalising disorders is interpersonal impairment. However, research investigating trust is scarce. A relatively novel approach for studying trust in psychopathology is through examination of social decision making using behavioural economic games.
OBJECTIVE
OBJECTIVE
To employ a modified trust game in order to determine whether externalising adolescents exhibit perturbed decision making in social and/or nonsocial contexts.
METHODS
METHODS
Externalising inpatient adolescents (
RESULTS
RESULTS
Externalising adolescents showed a limited increase in trust investments, compared to a significant increase in lottery investments, across early game trials relative to psychiatric controls. This significant three-way interaction between experimental group, game condition, and trials became most evident at the second trial of games. Between-group differences on trust investments were non-significant. However, externalising adolescents invested significantly less in the trust relative to lottery condition, an effect unobserved in psychiatric controls.
CONCLUSIONS
CONCLUSIONS
This study tentatively suggests that adolescent externalising disorders may be associated with an insensitivity to normative social exchange which may arise, in part, from a lack of anticipated co-player reciprocity. It is not the level of trust that may distinguish externalising adolescents but perhaps the form of which the trust exchange takes shape. Conclusions are tempered by the fact that the employed trust game did not include feedback in the form of co-player repayments.
Identifiants
pubmed: 33520772
doi: 10.21307/sjcapp-2019-013
pii: exeley
pmc: PMC7709937
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Pagination
92-96Subventions
Organisme : NIAAA NIH HHS
ID : F32 AA027136
Pays : United States
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