社会奖赏和皮质脑干连通性在药物使用中的作用》(The Role of Social Reward and Corticostriatal Connectivity in Substance Use)。

Journal of psychiatry and brain science Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-10-29 DOI:10.20900/jpbs.20200024
Daniel Sazhin, Angelique M Frazier, Caleb R Haynes, Camille R Johnston, Iris Ka-Yi Chat, Jeffrey B Dennison, Corinne P Bart, Michael E McCloskey, Jason M Chein, Dominic S Fareri, Lauren B Alloy, Johanna M Jarcho, David V Smith
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摘要

本报告介绍了一项正在进行的 R03 基金,该基金旨在探索特质奖赏敏感性、药物使用以及对社交和非社交奖赏的神经反应之间的联系。尽管以往的研究表明,特质奖赏敏感性和神经对奖赏的反应与药物使用有关,但这种关系是否会受到人们如何处理社交刺激的影响仍不清楚。我们正在通过一项神经影像学研究对这些问题进行调查,该研究以大学生为对象,采用个体差异测量方法,通过测量奖赏预期、策略行为、社会奖赏消费以及社会环境对奖赏处理的影响等任务来考察药物使用、社会环境和特质奖赏敏感性之间的关系。我们预测,药物使用将与纹状体功能障碍的不同模式相关联。具体来说,对奖赏不敏感的人将表现出对社会和非社会奖赏的纹状体反应减弱以及与眶额皮层的连接增强;相反,对奖赏不敏感的人将表现出对社会和非社会奖赏的纹状体反应增强以及与眶额皮层的连接减弱。我们还将研究自我报告的奖赏敏感性、药物使用以及纹状体对社会奖赏和社会环境的反应之间的关系。我们预测,报告药物使用水平最高的个体将对社会奖赏和社会背景表现出夸张的纹状体反应,这与自我报告的奖赏敏感性无关。研究大脑皮层对奖赏处理的反应将有助于描述奖赏敏感性、社会环境和药物使用之间的关系,同时为了解风险因素和分离神经认知机制奠定基础,这些机制可能成为提高干预效果的目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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The Role of Social Reward and Corticostriatal Connectivity in Substance Use.

This report describes an ongoing R03 grant that explores the links between trait reward sensitivity, substance use, and neural responses to social and nonsocial reward. Although previous research has shown that trait reward sensitivity and neural responses to reward are linked to substance use, whether this relationship is impacted by how people process social stimuli remains unclear. We are investigating these questions via a neuroimaging study with college-aged participants, using individual difference measures that examine the relation between substance use, social context, and trait reward sensitivity with tasks that measure reward anticipation, strategic behavior, social reward consumption, and the influence of social context on reward processing. We predict that substance use will be tied to distinct patterns of striatal dysfunction. Specifically, reward hyposensitive individuals will exhibit blunted striatal responses to social and non-social reward and enhanced connectivity with the orbitofrontal cortex; in contrast, reward hypersensitive individuals will exhibit enhanced striatal responses to social and non-social reward and blunted connectivity with the orbitofrontal cortex. We also will examine the relation between self-reported reward sensitivity, substance use, and striatal responses to social reward and social context. We predict that individuals reporting the highest levels of substance use will show exaggerated striatal responses to social reward and social context, independent of self-reported reward sensitivity. Examining corticostriatal responses to reward processing will help characterize the relation between reward sensitivity, social context and substance use while providing a foundation for understanding risk factors and isolating neurocognitive mechanisms that may be targeted to increase the efficacy of interventions.

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