Schizophrenia Research: Cognition (Sep 2024)

Decision-making under risk and its correlates in schizophrenia

  • Xiaoyu Dong,
  • Bridget Shovestul,
  • Abhishek Saxena,
  • Emily Dudek,
  • Stephanie Reda,
  • J. Steven Lamberti,
  • David Dodell-Feder

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37
p. 100314

Abstract

Read online

Schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSD) are associated with pervasive cognitive impairments, including deficits in decision-making under risk. However, there is inconclusive evidence regarding specific mechanisms underlying altered decision-making patterns. In this study, participants (33 SSD and 28 non-SSD) completed the Columbia Card Task, an explicit risk-taking task, to better understand risk preference and adjustment in dynamic decision-making. We found that while there is no group difference in overall risk-taking, risk preference, or optimal decision-making, risk adjustment to contextual factors (e.g., loss probability) is blunted in SSD. We also found associations between risk-taking/suboptimal decision-making and disorganized symptoms, excited symptoms, and role functioning, but no associations between decision-making and working memory. These results suggest that during a complex, dynamic risk-taking task, individuals with SSD exhibit less adaption to changing information about risk, which may reflect risk imperception.

Keywords