Translational Psychiatry (Mar 2025)

Optimistic and pessimistic cognitive judgement bias modulates the stress response and cancer progression in zebrafish

  • Felipe Espigares,
  • M. Victoria Alvarado,
  • Diana Abad-Tortosa,
  • Susana A. M. Varela,
  • Daniel Sobral,
  • Pedro Faísca,
  • Tiago Paixão,
  • Rui F. Oliveira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-025-03311-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Cognitive judgement bias in decision-making under ambiguity occurs both in animals and humans, with some individuals interpreting ambiguous stimulus as positive (optimism) and others as negative (pessimism). We hypothesize that judgement bias is a personality trait and that individuals with a pessimistic bias would be more reactive to stressors and therefore more susceptible to stress-related diseases than optimistic ones. Here, we show that zebrafish judgment bias is a consistent behavioral trait over time, and that pessimistic and optimistic fish express phenotype-specific neurogenomic responses to stress. Furthermore, both phenotypes show differential activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-interrenal axis in response to chronic stress, suggesting that optimists have a lower stress reactivity. Accordingly, optimists seem to be more resilient to disease than pessimists, as shown by a lower tumorigenesis in a zebrafish melanoma line [Tg(mtifa:HRAS-GFP)]. Together these results indicate that judgement bias is paralleled by differences in the stress response with implications for disease resilience.