酒精中毒对侧翼任务中反应冲突的影响

Ksenija Marinkovic, Elizabeth Rickenbacher, Sheeva Azma
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摘要

事件会唤起无缝整合的刺激评估和反应准备处理流,在调节功能的引导下,行为会根据内部目标和环境需求灵活改变。尽管有证据表明酒精对注意力和运动控制都有有害影响,但人们对酒精中毒影响这些处理流的神经基础还知之甚少。为了分离和研究这两个方面的相对易感性,我们采用了一种彩色版埃里克森侧翼任务,在刺激和反应加工层面操纵兼容性。我们对健康的社交饮酒者进行了功能磁共振成像(fMRI),他们在平衡设计中同时参与了酒精(男性为 0.6 克/千克乙醇,女性为 0.55 克/千克乙醇)和安慰剂条件。酒精增加了对反应水平不协调的反应时间,并降低了整体准确性。与无冲突条件相比,在安慰剂条件下,观察到的大脑活动主要是由内侧前额叶和外侧前额叶皮层中与反应相关的冲突引起的,这与大量证据表明它们在冲突处理中的作用一致。在酒精作用下,内侧额叶皮层和岛叶因反应不一致而诱发的活动并不明显,这表明酒精干扰了反应抑制和准备。相反,腹外侧前额叶和运动前区的活动在酒精作用下比安慰剂作用下相对较多,表明它们的补偿性参与。这一发现与对长期酗酒者的研究中发现的前额叶活动补偿性增加一致,表明以优化反应策略为目标的功能重组。这些结果描述了前额叶网络的功能差异和选择性易感性,该网络为反应级冲突处理提供支持。我们的研究结果与适度饮酒主要影响注意力或刺激相关处理的观点不符,而是认为适度饮酒主要影响反应抑制、选择和执行,这对行为自控模型和无法克制饮酒产生了影响。
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Effects of Alcohol Intoxication on Response Conflict in a Flanker Task.

Events evoke seamlessly integrated stimulus evaluation and response preparation processing streams, guided by regulative functions that change behavior flexibly in accord with the internal goals and contextual demands. The neural basis of the effects of alcohol intoxication on these processing streams is poorly understood, despite the evidence of alcohol's deleterious effects on both attention and motor control. In an attempt to separate and examine relative susceptibility of these two dimensions, we employed a color version of the Eriksen flanker task that manipulated compatibility at the stimulus- and response-processing levels. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was performed in healthy social drinkers as they participated in both alcohol (0.6 g/kg ethanol for men, 0.55 g/kg for women) and placebo conditions in a counterbalanced design. Alcohol increased reaction times to response-level incongruity and decreased accuracy overall. Relative to the no-conflict condition, the observed brain activity was predominantly evoked by response-related conflict in medial prefrontal and lateral prefrontal cortices under placebo, in agreement with extensive evidence of their role in conflict processing. Activity evoked by response incongruity in the medial frontal cortex and insula was insignificant under alcohol, indicating its interference with response inhibition and preparation. Conversely, activity in ventrolateral prefrontal and premotor areas was relatively greater under alcohol than placebo, suggesting their compensatory engagement. This finding is consistent with the compensatory prefrontal activity increase found in studies with chronic alcoholic individuals, indicating functional reorganization with a goal of optimizing response strategy. These results delineate functional differences and selective susceptibility of a prefrontal network subserving response-level conflict processing. Our findings are incompatible with notions that moderate alcohol primarily affects attentional or stimulus-related processing and argue instead that its primary influence is on response inhibition, selection, and execution, with ramifications for the models of behavioral self-control and the inability to refrain from drinking.

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