Reduced Segregation Between Cognitive and Emotional Processes in Cannabis Dependence.

Cereb Cortex

National Institute on Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.

Published: March 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how addiction, specifically cannabis dependence, affects the relationship between cognitive control and emotion, suggesting a loss of separation between the two in individuals with addiction.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 1,206 young adults, including 89 with cannabis dependence, finding that negative emotional states were linked to poorer cognitive performance only in the addiction group.
  • Functional brain imaging revealed that in those with cannabis dependence, brain responses to emotional stimuli significantly overlapped with those related to cognitive tasks, indicating a disruption in the normal segregation of cognitive and emotional processing.

Article Abstract

Addiction is characterized by an erosion of cognitive control toward drug taking that is accentuated by negative emotional states. Here we tested the hypothesis that enhanced interference on cognitive control reflects a loss of segregation between cognition and emotion in addiction. We analyzed Human Connectome Project data from 1206 young adults, including 89 with cannabis dependence (CD). Two composite factors, one for cognition and one for emotion, were derived using principal component (PC) analyses. Component scores for these PCs were significantly associated in the CD group, such that negative emotionality correlated with poor cognition. However, the corresponding component scores were uncorrelated in matched controls and nondependent recreational cannabis users (n = 87). In CD, but not controls or recreational users, functional magnetic resonance imaging activations to emotional stimuli (angry/fearful faces > shapes) correlated with activations to cognitive demand (working memory; 2-back > 0-back). Canonical correlation analyses linked individual differences in cognitive and emotional component scores with brain activations. In CD, there was substantial overlap between cognitive and emotional brain-behavior associations, but in controls, associations were more restricted to the cognitive domain. These findings support our hypothesis of impaired segregation between cognitive and emotional processes in CD that might contribute to poor cognitive control under conditions of increased emotional demand.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7306169PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhz113DOI Listing

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