Imagine looking at your calendar and feeling a sense of dread about upcoming events, or a flatness where excitement should be. That's what this research is about—how people with depression and schizophrenia anticipate pleasure and displeasure from future experiences. The analysis pooled data from over 1,400 participants across multiple studies.
It found that people on the schizophrenia spectrum, including those with clinical and subclinical symptoms, reported expecting less pleasure from future social events compared to people without these conditions. However, they didn't expect more displeasure. In contrast, people with depression expected both less pleasure and more displeasure from what was coming. The effect was more pronounced for displeasure in depression.
This was a meta-analysis, which means it combined results from existing observational studies. That's a strength for spotting patterns, but it can't tell us what causes these differences in anticipation. The study also didn't track whether these patterns change with treatment or over time. The findings help map the emotional landscape of these conditions, showing that a lack of motivation might be rooted in how the future is felt before it even arrives.