Hao Chen, Sören Kuitunen-Paul, Maria Garbusow, Marina Lukezic, Quentin J M Huys, Michael A Rapp, Andreas Heinz, Michael N Smolka
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Expanding our previous findings that model-based/model-free (MB/MF) control-often conceptualized as goal-directed and habitual behavior-at age 18 is associated with alcohol drinking trajectories over three years, this study investigates whether changes in MB/MF control from ages 18 to 21 i) stem from alcohol exposure and ii) predict drinking patterns up to age 24.
Methods: We followed a community sample of 124 18-year-old young men for six years. At ages 18 and 21, participants performed a two-step task assessing MB and MF control while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging (91 neural datasets). Drinking behavior was assessed using annual interviews complemented by questionnaires every six months. Correlation coefficients assessed the effect of cumulative alcohol exposure from age 18 to 21 on changes in MB/MF parameters. Latent growth curve models evaluated associations between MB/MF changes and drinking trajectories from ages 21 to 24.
Results: Alcohol exposure from ages 18 to 21 showed no significant effect on changes of MB/MF control. An increased MB behavioral score was protective for binge drinking, while an increased MF behavioral score predicted higher binge drinking at age 21, but not its future development. Changes in MF ventral striatum signals were associated with escalated consumption score development from ages 21 to 24, whereas MF ventromedial prefrontal signals exhibited a protective effect.
Conclusions: Preceding changes in behavioral and neural MB and MF control were linked to future drinking patterns, suggesting that interventions aimed at modulating MB/ MF controls could help mitigate subsequent risky drinking behaviors.
期刊介绍:
Biological Psychiatry is an official journal of the Society of Biological Psychiatry and was established in 1969. It is the first journal in the Biological Psychiatry family, which also includes Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging and Biological Psychiatry: Global Open Science. The Society's main goal is to promote excellence in scientific research and education in the fields related to the nature, causes, mechanisms, and treatments of disorders pertaining to thought, emotion, and behavior. To fulfill this mission, Biological Psychiatry publishes peer-reviewed, rapid-publication articles that present new findings from original basic, translational, and clinical mechanistic research, ultimately advancing our understanding of psychiatric disorders and their treatment. The journal also encourages the submission of reviews and commentaries on current research and topics of interest.