Aims: To use cognitive modelling to investigate psychological processes underlying decision-making in male abstinent heroin misusers (AHMs).

Design: A case-control study design.

Setting: A drug misuse treatment centre in Taiwan.

Participants: Eighty-eight male AHMs and 48 male controls.

Measurements: Four parameters representing the attention to wins, learning rate, response sensitivity and incentive of heroin-related stimuli from the modified Go/NoGo discrimination task.

Findings: A modified cue-dependent learning (CD) model with four parameters representing attention to wins, learning rate, response sensitivity and incentive of heroin-related stimuli had a lower value of the sum of Bayesian information criterion (showing a better fit) than the original CD model (9555.50 versus 11,192.22, P < 0.001). The AHM group had a higher value of the heroin-incentive parameter than the control group (0.26 versus -1.66, P < 0.05). The attention to wins and heroin-incentive parameters were associated positively with total commission rate and negatively with total omission rate in the AHM group (P < 0.001).

Conclusions: Male abstinent heroin misusers appear to be more influenced by heroin-related stimuli during decision-making than males with no history of heroin misuse.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/add.12591DOI Listing

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