# Reward Devaluation, Positive Valence System Disturbance, and Impairment

> **NIH NIH R15** · MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY · 2020 · $51,085

## Abstract

ABSTRACT/PROJECT SUMMARY
Objective. The current study will evaluate tasks examining tenets of reward devaluation theory and their ability
to predict psychological distress and functioning over time among a sample of individuals with normal-to-
abnormal symptoms of psychopathology. This application is significant and innovative and has great promise of
experimental therapeutics translation. Background. Depression is the leading cause of disability for people aged
15 to 44, with high costs to public health. There is thus great need for research on underlying predictors that help
better guide treatment interventions. Reward Devaluation Theory outlines experimental indicators of avoidance
of positivity that represent disturbances of Positive Valence Systems, which are commonly abnormal among
depressed persons. Reward Devaluation Theory may thus advance how positive valence systems disturbance
is conceptualized and help predict treatment response in depression. Significance. Multiple sets of meta-
analytic findings supporting reward devaluation theory indicate that individuals with depression avoid rewarding
stimuli. This is a discriminant finding that is not present in anxious individuals and is not present when examining
responses to negative stimuli. Innovation. Reward devaluation theory is thus a highly innovative framework for
interpreting an endophenotypic predictor of positive valence systems disturbance indicated by depressive
symptoms. Avoidance (i.e., devaluation, not just lack of valuation) of reward is an underinvestigated
phenomenon that has been uncovered by the PI. Our research team has also uncovered evidence suggesting
that separable cognitive/affective components of (1) reward devaluation and (2) anhedonia can be mapped over
time via network analysis. This provides highly precise cognitive/affective pathways for future translation. Thus,
these sets of findings support our novel theory derived from scientifically rigorous analyses. Specific Aims. The
aims of the proposed project are to further determine how reward devaluation and anhedonia pathways unfold
over time, how they relate to distress and impairment, and how they are associated with novel cognitive and self-
report constructs theoretically related to reward devaluation. Approach. A longitudinal study will examine reward
devaluation and anhedonia in a sample with normal-to-abnormal depressive symptom profiles. Participants will
be assessed weekly for six weeks. Multilevel linear and network modeling will be used for data analysis.
Expected Results. Tasks that assess reward devaluation and anhedonia will predict symptoms of depression
and impairment over time. Moreover, the reward devaluation and anhedonia pathways will be present in network
models, with novel cognitive and self-report measures connecting to the reward devaluation circuit over time.
Future Directions. Our ultimate goal is to use tasks indexing reward devaluation and anhedonia as part of novel
assessment and tre...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10114869
- **Project number:** 2R15MH101573-03
- **Recipient organization:** MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** E. Samuel Winer
- **Activity code:** R15 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $51,085
- **Award type:** 2
- **Project period:** 2014-09-24 → 2021-07-01

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10114869

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10114869, Reward Devaluation, Positive Valence System Disturbance, and Impairment (2R15MH101573-03). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-22 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10114869. Licensed CC0.

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