AI Article Synopsis

  • Individuals who drank alcohol early in life show issues with decision-making, raising questions about whether these issues lead to or result from alcohol use.
  • Researchers conducted studies using adolescent rats to explore if drinking alcohol affects decision-making later in life, using a reward-based task to assess choices.
  • Results showed that rats drinking high amounts of alcohol during adolescence preferred risky options even months after stopping alcohol, suggesting that early alcohol exposure can lead to long-term changes in adult decision-making behavior.

Article Abstract

Individuals who abused alcohol at an early age show decision-making impairments. However, the question of whether maladaptive choice constitutes a predisposing factor to, or a consequence resulting from, alcohol exposure remains open. To examine whether a causal link exists between voluntary alcohol consumption during adolescence and adult decision making the present studies used a rodent model. High levels of voluntary alcohol intake were promoted by providing adolescent rats with access to alcohol in a palatable gel matrix under nondeprivation conditions. A probability-discounting instrumental response task offered a choice between large but uncertain rewards and small but certain rewards to assess risk-based choice in adulthood either 3 weeks or 3 months following alcohol exposure. While control animals' performance on this task closely conformed to a predictive model of risk-neutral value matching, rats that consumed high levels of alcohol during adolescence violated this model, demonstrating greater risk preference. Evidence of significant risk bias was still present when choice was assessed 3 months following discontinuation of alcohol access. These findings provide evidence that adolescent alcohol exposure may lead to altered decision making during adulthood and this model offers a promising approach to the investigation of the neurobiological underpinnings of this link.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2765167PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0906629106DOI Listing

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