TY - JOUR
T1 - Reward sensitivity across the lifespan in males and females and its associations with psychopathology
AU - Cardoso Melo, Dener
AU - Schreuder, Marieke
AU - Groen, Robin
AU - Sarsembayeva, Dina
AU - Hartman, C.A.
PY - 2023/4
Y1 - 2023/4
N2 - Most studies on the relationship between reward sensitivity and psychopathology have focused on one condition at a time and have not considered potential sex or lifespan differences. Using nonlinear modeling, we explored reward sensitivity normative patterns across the lifespan (age range: 4–91; N = 37,727) for men and women, and subsequently studied its sex-specific associations with psychopathology problems (inattention, hyperactivity, autism spectrum, reactive aggression, depression, anxiety, smoking, and alcohol, soft and hard drug use). Findings indicated a nonlinear trend for reward sensitivity across the lifespan: within childhood, adolescence, middle-age adulthood, and older adulthood, older individuals scored lower compared to younger ones, with no age differences beyond age 70. Across young adulthood, older males scored higher and females presented no age differences. Reward sensitivity was positively associated with all psychopathology problem domains studied and associations were clustered into three groups: neurodevelopmental, with stronger associations in young age and more lifespan similarity in males; internalizing, with stronger associations in young and middle adulthood and in females; and substance use, with mostly similar associations across the lifespan and virtually no sex differences. In conclusion, reward sensitivity is transdiagnostically relevant for psychopathology, with specific lifespan and sex patterns within the neurodevelopmental, internalizing, and substance use problems.
AB - Most studies on the relationship between reward sensitivity and psychopathology have focused on one condition at a time and have not considered potential sex or lifespan differences. Using nonlinear modeling, we explored reward sensitivity normative patterns across the lifespan (age range: 4–91; N = 37,727) for men and women, and subsequently studied its sex-specific associations with psychopathology problems (inattention, hyperactivity, autism spectrum, reactive aggression, depression, anxiety, smoking, and alcohol, soft and hard drug use). Findings indicated a nonlinear trend for reward sensitivity across the lifespan: within childhood, adolescence, middle-age adulthood, and older adulthood, older individuals scored lower compared to younger ones, with no age differences beyond age 70. Across young adulthood, older males scored higher and females presented no age differences. Reward sensitivity was positively associated with all psychopathology problem domains studied and associations were clustered into three groups: neurodevelopmental, with stronger associations in young age and more lifespan similarity in males; internalizing, with stronger associations in young and middle adulthood and in females; and substance use, with mostly similar associations across the lifespan and virtually no sex differences. In conclusion, reward sensitivity is transdiagnostically relevant for psychopathology, with specific lifespan and sex patterns within the neurodevelopmental, internalizing, and substance use problems.
U2 - 10.1016/j.paid.2022.112041
DO - 10.1016/j.paid.2022.112041
M3 - Article
SN - 0191-8869
VL - 204
JO - Personality and Individual Differences
JF - Personality and Individual Differences
M1 - 112041
ER -