Maternal psychopathology is differentially associated with adolescent offspring neural response to reward given offspring ADHD risk.

J Psychiatr Res

Clinical and Developmental Neuropsychology Research Group, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Budapest, Hungary. Electronic address:

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how parental psychopathology influences the brain's response to rewards in adolescents, focusing on those at risk for ADHD compared to those not at risk.
  • In adolescents at risk for ADHD, parental psychopathology is mostly tied to a reduced neural response to rewards, while in those not at risk, it often leads to an increased response.
  • The findings suggest that while maternal psychopathology significantly impacts reward responsiveness, paternal psychopathology does not show a similar influence in either group of adolescents.

Article Abstract

Reinforcement sensitivity is a hypothesized attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) intermediate phenotype but its role in transgenerational transmission of ADHD-linked psychopathology risk is largely unknown. We examined, in a carefully phenotyped, N = 123 sample of adolescents (M = 15.27 years, SD = 0.984; 61.78% boys), whether (1) parental psychopathology is differentially associated with fMRI-indexed neural response to reward receipt and (2) both maternal and paternal psychopathology are associated with neural response to reward; across adolescents at-risk for and not at-risk for ADHD. Indices of parental psychopathology were differentially associated with adolescent offspring neural response to reward such that across measures, parental psychopathology was negatively or not associated with offspring superior frontal gyrus (SFG) response to reward receipt in adolescents at-risk for ADHD, but parental psychopathology was positively associated with offspring SFG response in adolescents not at-risk. Further, across measures, greater maternal psychopathology was associated with blunted adolescent SFG response to reward in adolescents at-risk for ADHD whereas greater maternal externalizing problems were linked to enhanced adolescent SFG response in adolescents not at-risk. Across measures, paternal psychopathology was not associated with adolescent response to reward, in either group. ADHD risk confers differential reward-related susceptibility to the effects of parental psychopathology. Results also show this association is nonspecific in terms of parental psychopathology type but is specific to maternal psychopathology.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychires.2024.06.054DOI Listing

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