Reward anticipation is a transdiagnostic factor relevant to both depression and psychosis. Adolescence is a critical neurodevelopmental period when these reward-related circuits—including frontostriatal, limbic/insular, and striatal circuits may contribute to shared vulnerability across disorders, yet longitudinal transdiagnostic comparisons in early adolescents remain scarce. Longitudinal functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data acquired during the monetary incentive delay (MID) task were analyzed in 1, 839 adolescents from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, assessed at three time points over four years (baseline, 2- and 4-year follow-ups) and classified as a control group (HC; n = 1, 380; baseline M age = 9. 51, 47. 0% girls), high-risk for depression (HRDep; n = 217; M age = 9. 49, 44. 7% girls), high-risk for psychosis (HRPsy; n = 202; M age = 9. 51, 47. 5% girls), and combined risk groups (HRCom; n = 40; M age =9. 45, 55. 0% girls). Linear and quadratic within-group trajectories and between-group differences in activation and developmental slopes were assessed. HC showed widespread linear increases in prefrontal, limbic/insular, and striatal regions (p s < 0. 05), with neural activation changes in the left middle frontal gyrus and right accumbens following a quadratic trend (p s = 0. 016 – 0. 018). Compared with HC, HRDep exhibited progressive OFC activation and biphasic parahippocampal gyrus (p s < 0. 020), HRPsy showed reduced left NAcc (F = 5. 77, p = 0. 017), and HRCom exhibited no significant longitudinal changes. Controls exhibited steeper longitudinal slopes than the HRDep and HRPsy in the right suborbital sulcus, right subcallosal gyrus, and left nucleus accumbens (p s < 0. 05). High-risk adolescents primarily show disorder-specific reward anticipation abnormalities, with prefrontal–limbic imbalance in HRDep and striatal dysfunction in HRPsy, while prefrontal deficits in HRCom may index a shared transdiagnostic vulnerability across depressive and psychosis-spectrum risk.
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Yating Huang
Hui Xu
W. Zhang
Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience
University of Hong Kong
East China Normal University
Beijing Children’s Hospital
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Huang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7ddcbfa21ec5bbf0611b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dcn.2026.101736