Perception of effort but not reward sensitivity is impaired in people with Parkinsons disease
Wood, J. M.; Eyssalenne, A.; Therrien, A. S.; Wong, A. L.
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Deciding whether and how to act depends on a trade-off between the effort required to execute a given action and the potential reward for completing it. Impairments in this effort-reward trade-off have been proposed to underlie reduced movement vigor, or bradykinesia, in Parkinsons disease (PD). However, several mechanisms could alter the effort-reward trade-off in PD, each with unique implications for understanding and treating bradykinesia. Therefore, we individually examined whether people with PD (both on and off dopamine medication) demonstrated reduced sensitivity to reward value, increased perception of effort, or a biased mapping between effort and reward, compared to age- and sex-matched neurotypical controls. We found that people with PD exhibited increased effort perception and, surprisingly, no reduced sensitivity to reward value or a biased mapping between effort and reward. These findings suggest that effort perception could be an important factor driving bradykinesia in PD.
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