AUTHOR=Herzallah Mohammad M., Moustafa Ahmed A., Natsheh Joman Y., Abdellatif Salam M., Taha Mohamad B., Tayem Yasin I., Sehwail Mahmud A., Amleh Ivona , Petrides Georgios , Myers Catherine E., Gluck Mark A. TITLE=Learning from negative feedback in patients with major depressive disorder is attenuated by SSRI antidepressants JOURNAL=Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience VOLUME=7 YEAR=2013 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/integrative-neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnint.2013.00067 DOI=10.3389/fnint.2013.00067 ISSN=1662-5145 ABSTRACT=
One barrier to interpreting past studies of cognition and major depressive disorder (MDD) has been the failure in many studies to adequately dissociate the effects of MDD from the potential cognitive side effects of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) use. To better understand how remediation of depressive symptoms affects cognitive function in MDD, we evaluated three groups of subjects: medication-naïve patients with MDD, medicated patients with MDD receiving the SSRI paroxetine, and healthy control (HC) subjects. All were administered a category-learning task that allows for dissociation between learning from positive feedback (reward) vs. learning from negative feedback (punishment). Healthy subjects learned significantly better from positive feedback than medication-naïve and medicated MDD groups, whose learning accuracy did not differ significantly. In contrast, medicated patients with MDD learned significantly less from negative feedback than medication-naïve patients with MDD and healthy subjects, whose learning accuracy was comparable. A comparison of subject’s relative sensitivity to positive vs. negative feedback showed that both the medicated MDD and HC groups conform to