Frequency-specific changes in prefrontal activity associated with maladaptive belief updating in volatile environments in euthymic bipolar disorder

Ivanova, Marina; Germanova, Ksenia; Petelin, Dmitry S.; Ragimova, Aynur; Kopytin, Grigory; Volel, Beatrice A.; Nikulin, Vadim V. and Herrojo Ruiz, Maria. 2025. Frequency-specific changes in prefrontal activity associated with maladaptive belief updating in volatile environments in euthymic bipolar disorder. Translational Psychiatry, 15, 13. ISSN 2158-3188 [Article]

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Abstract or Description

Bipolar disorder (BD) involves altered reward processing and decision-making, with inconsistencies across studies. Here, we integrated hierarchical Bayesian modelling with magnetoencephalography (MEG) to characterise maladaptive belief updating in this condition. First, we determined if previously reported increased learning rates in BD stem from a heightened expectation of environmental changes. Additionally, we examined if this increased expectation speeds up belief updating in decision-making, associated with modulation of rhythmic neural activity within the prefrontal, orbitofrontal, and anterior cingulate cortex (PFC, OFC, ACC). Twenty-two euthymic BD and 27 healthy control (HC) participants completed a reward-based motor decision-making task in a volatile setting. Hierarchical Bayesian modelling revealed BD participants anticipated greater environmental volatility, resulting in a more stochastic mapping from beliefs to actions and paralleled by lower win rates and a reduced tendency to repeat rewarded actions than HC. Despite this, BD individuals adjusted their expectations of action-outcome contingencies more slowly, but both groups invigorated their actions similarly. On a neural level, while healthy individuals exhibited an alpha-beta suppression and gamma increase during belief updating, BD participants showed dampened effects, extending across the PFC, OFC, and ACC regions. This was accompanied by an abnormally increased beta-band directed information flow in BD. Overall, the results suggest euthymic BD individuals anticipate environmental change without adequately learning from it, contributing to maladaptive belief updating. Alterations in frequency-domain amplitude and functional connectivity within the PFC, OFC, and ACC during belief updating underlie the computational effects and could serve as potential indicators for predicting relapse in future research.

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-025-03225-6

Data Access Statement:

Behavioural data are publicly available at the Open Science Framework (OSF) repository, https://osf.io/m63a8/. Participants did not consent to the open sharing of their MEG or MRI data.

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Psychology

Dates:

DateEvent
7 January 2025Accepted
17 January 2025Published

Item ID:

38116

Date Deposited:

20 Jan 2025 10:55

Last Modified:

20 Jan 2025 10:55

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/38116

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