Neurobiology of social reward valuation in adults with a history of anorexia nervosa.
Maggie M SweitzerKarli K WatsonSavannah R ErwinAmy A WinecoffNandini DattaScott HuettelMichael L PlattNancy L ZuckerPublished in: PloS one (2018)
The rewarding value of full body images decreases with a sustained disorder course. This may reflect an extension of atypical reward processing documented in AN-WR, perhaps as a function of starvation dampening visceral motivational signals; the deployment of cognitive strategies that lessen the experience of reward; and/or the nature of the stimuli themselves as provocative of eating disorder symptoms (e.g., thin bodies). These findings did not extend to smiling face stimuli. Advances in technology (e.g., virtual avatars, text messaging) may provide novel means to build relationships, including therapeutic relationships, to support improved social connections without threats to symptom provocation.