Value signals guiding choices for cannabis versus non-drug rewards in people who use cannabis near-daily.

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Tác giả: Gillinder Bedi, Ziva D Cooper, Paul Glimcher, Margaret Haney, Xuejun Hao, Anna B Konova, Will Lawn, Nicholas Van Dam

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 004.338 Systems analysis and design, computer architecture, performance evaluation of real-time computers

Thông tin xuất bản: Germany : Psychopharmacology , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 5258

 RATIONALE: Despite the critical role of choice processes in substance use disorders, the neurobehavioral mechanisms guiding human decisions about drugs remain poorly understood. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to characterize the neural encoding of subjective value (SV) for cannabis versus non-drug rewards (snacks) in people who use cannabis on a near-daily/daily frequency (PWUCF) and assessed the impact of cannabis and snack stimuli ('cues') on SV encoding. METHODS: Twenty-one non-treatment-seeking PWUCF (≥4 days/week
  1 female) participated in an inpatient, crossover experiment with four counterbalanced conditions: 1. neutral cues/cannabis choices
  2. cannabis cues/cannabis choices
  3. neutral cues/snack choices
  and 4. snack cues/snack choices. In each condition, participants were exposed to cues before an fMRI scan during which they repeatedly chose between 0-6 cannabis puffs/snacks and a set monetary amount, with randomly-selected choices implemented. The SV signal was operationalized as the neural correlates of the strength of preference for cannabis/snack choices. fMRI data were analyzed for twenty participants. RESULTS: Despite equivalent choice behavior, SV signals for cannabis, but not snacks, were observed in regions known to encode SV for various rewards (ventromedial prefrontal cortex, vmPFC
  ventral striatum
  dorsal posterior cingulate cortex, dPCC). SV encoding in vmPFC was stronger for cannabis than snacks. In the dPCC, the impact of cues on SV signals was moderated by reward type. CONCLUSIONS: PWUCF had expected neural value encoding for cannabis but disrupted non-drug SV encoding, despite equivalent choice behavior. This provides tentative support for theories that highlight dysregulated neural valuation of non-drug rewards as a hallmark of problematic cannabis use.
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