Publications by authors named "Jaisal T Merchant"

Background And Hypothesis: Disturbances in effort-cost decision-making have been highlighted as a potential transdiagnostic process underpinning negative symptoms in individuals with schizophrenia. However, recent studies using computational phenotyping show that individuals employ a range of strategies to allocate effort, and use of different strategies is associated with unique clinical and cognitive characteristics. Building on prior work in schizophrenia, this study evaluated whether effort allocation strategies differed in individuals with distinct psychotic disorders.

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Despite evidence that individuals with schizophrenia (SZ) have an intact desire for social relationships, they have small social networks and report high levels of loneliness. Difficulty with reinforcement learning (RL), the ability to update behavior based on feedback, may inhibit the formation and maintenance of social relationships in SZ. However, impaired RL in SZ has largely been demonstrated via monetary tasks.

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It has been suggested that schizophrenia is associated with deficits in anticipatory but not consummatory pleasure, though there is mixed support for this hypothesis. As individuals with schizophrenia can experience both negative and depressive symptoms, symptom heterogeneity in this population could contribute to these mixed hedonic findings. Specifically, while some research suggests that negative symptoms of schizophrenia are related to reduced anticipatory but not consummatory pleasure, research on major depressive disorder suggests that depressive symptoms are associated with both decreased anticipatory and consummatory pleasure.

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Background: Deficits in goal-directed behavior (i.e. behavior conducted to achieve a specific goal or outcome) are core to schizophrenia, difficult to treat, and associated with poor functional outcomes.

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Recent theoretical models propose that abnormal effort-cost decision-making (ECDM) likely has divergent underpinnings across mood and psychotic disorders. However, whether this same model applies to individuals across the psychosis spectrum, including individuals with affective psychosis, remains unclear. This study aimed to empirically test whether two component processes - working memory and reward learning - contribute to ECDM impairment across the psychosis spectrum.

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