AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates compulsive alcohol drinking, particularly how it continues despite negative consequences, and explores the motivations behind this behavior.
  • Researchers utilized lickometry to analyze the drinking patterns of subjects consuming both quinine-alcohol (QuiA) and alcohol-only (Alc), noting differences in the variability and organization of drinking bouts between the two.
  • Findings suggest that QuiA drinking involves a more automatic and efficient response, characterized by less variability and stronger bout initiation, indicating a potential strategy that promotes continued intake despite adverse conditions, termed "Head Down and Push" responding.

Article Abstract

Compulsive alcohol drinking, where intake persists regardless of adverse consequences, plays a major role in the substantial costs of alcohol use disorder. However, the processes that promote aversion-resistant drinking remain poorly understood. Compulsion-like responding has been considered automatic and reflexive and also to involve higher motivation, since drinking persists despite adversity. Thus, we used lickometry, where microstructural behavioral changes can reflect altered motivation, to test whether conflict-resistant intake [quinine-alcohol (QuiA)] reflected greater automaticity or motivation relative to alcohol-only drinking (Alc). Front-loading during QuiA and Alc suggested incentive to drink in both. However, the relationship between total licking and intake was less variable during QuiA, as was lick volume, without changes in average responding. QuiA bout organization was also less variable, with fewer licks outside of bouts (stray licks) and fewer gaps within bouts. Interestingly, QuiA avoidance of stray licking continued into short bouts, with fewer short and more medium-length bouts, which was striking given their minor impact on intake. Instead, more effort at bout onset could allow short bouts to persist longer. Indeed, while QuiA licking was overall faster, QuiA bouts were especially fast at bout initiation. However, few QuiA changes individually predicted greater intake, perhaps suggesting an overarching strategy during aversion-resistant responding. Thus, our results indicate that aversion-resistant intake exhibited less variability, where increased automaticity could decrease need for awareness, and stronger bout initiation, which might prolong responding despite adversity. This may reflect a collective strategy, which we call Head Down and Push responding that facilitates conflict-resistant, compulsion-like intake.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/adb.12608DOI Listing

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