Cocaine dependent individuals with attenuated striatal activation during reinforcement learning are more susceptible to relapse.

Autoren/Mitwirkende
Titel
Cocaine dependent individuals with attenuated striatal activation during reinforcement learning are more susceptible to relapse.
Zusammenfassung
Cocaine-dependent individuals show altered brain activation during decision making. It is unclear, however, whether these activation differences are related to relapse vulnerability. This study tested the hypothesis that brain-activation patterns during reinforcement learning are linked to relapse 1 year later in individuals entering treatment for cocaine dependence. Subjects performed a Paper-Scissors-Rock task during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). A year later, we examined whether subjects had remained abstinent (n=15) or relapsed (n=15). Although the groups did not differ on demographic characteristics, behavioral performance, or lifetime substance use, abstinent patients reported greater motivation to win than relapsed patients. The fMRI results indicated that compared with abstinent individuals, relapsed users exhibited lower activation in (1) bilateral inferior frontal gyrus and striatum during decision making more generally; and (2) bilateral middle frontal gyrus and anterior insula during reward contingency learning in particular. Moreover, whereas abstinent patients exhibited greater left middle frontal and striatal activation to wins than losses, relapsed users did not demonstrate modulation in these regions as a function of outcome valence. Thus, individuals at high risk for relapse relative to those who are able to abstain allocate fewer neural resources to action-outcome contingency formation and decision making, as well as having less motivation to win on a laboratory-based task.
Publikation
Psychiatry research
Band
223
Ausgabe
2
Seiten
129-139
Datum
2014 Aug 30
Zeitschriften-Abkürzung
Psychiatry Res
Sprache
eng
ISSN
1872-7123 0165-1781
Rechte
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
Extra
Place: Ireland PMID: 24862388 PMCID: PMC4096111
Zitierung
Stewart, J. L., Connolly, C. G., May, A. C., Tapert, S. F., Wittmann, M., & Paulus, M. P. (2014). Cocaine dependent individuals with attenuated striatal activation during reinforcement learning are more susceptible to relapse. Psychiatry Research, 223(2), 129–139. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.2014.04.014
Team