Does effort-cost decision-making relate to real-world motivation in people living with HIV?

J Clin Exp Neuropsychol

Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Published: December 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Lower motivation in older individuals with HIV is not well-understood, and effort-cost decision-making (ECDM) tasks may help measure motivation by evaluating willingness to exert effort for rewards.
  • A study involving 80 older adults with well-controlled HIV looked for links between ECDM task performance and self-reported motivation but found no direct relationship.
  • Despite no correlation with motivation, participants who were willing to exert more effort in ECDM tasks reported spending more time on real-world activities, indicating some potential clinical relevance for assessing motivation.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Low motivation is frequent in older people with HIV, yet poorly understood. Effort-cost decision-making (ECDM) tasks inspired by behavioral economics have shown promise as indicators of motivation or apathy. These tasks assess the willingness to exert effort to earn a monetary reward, providing an estimate of the subjective "cost" of effort for each participant. Here we sought evidence for a relationship between ECDM task performance and self-reported motivation in a cross-sectional study involving 80 middle-aged and older people with well-controlled HIV infection, a chronic health condition with a high burden of mental and cognitive health challenges.

Methods: Participants attending a regular follow-up visit for a Canadian longitudinal study of brain health in HIV completed a computerized ECDM task and a self-report measure of motivation. Other brain health measures were available, collected for the parent study (cognition, depression, anxiety, and vitality, as well as self-reported time spent on real-world leisure activities).

Results: Contrary to our hypothesis, we found no relationship between ECDM performance and self-reported motivation. However, those willing to accept higher effort in the ECDM task also reported more time engaged in real-world activities. This association had a small-to-moderate effect size.

Conclusions: The behavioral economics construct of subjective cost of effort, measured with a laboratory ECDM task, does not relate to motivation in people living with chronic HIV. However, the task shows some relationship with real-world goal-directed behavior, suggesting this construct has potential clinical relevance. More work is needed to understand how the subjective cost of effort plays out in clinical symptoms and everyday activities.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13803395.2022.2058464DOI Listing

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  • Despite no correlation with motivation, participants who were willing to exert more effort in ECDM tasks reported spending more time on real-world activities, indicating some potential clinical relevance for assessing motivation.
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