AI Article Synopsis

  • Substance use is common among young adults (ages 18-25), but not everyone who uses substances does so problematically; this study focuses on understanding the neurocognitive factors that might predict the severity of substance use during this time.
  • The research investigates whether lower efficiency of evidence accumulation (EEA) is a risk factor for substance use, with findings from an fMRI study showing that lower EEA is linked to increased substance use as individuals transition from ages 22 to 26.
  • The study concludes that EEA serves as a significant neurocognitive risk factor for substance use and provides valuable insights into the neural mechanisms behind this behavior, informing theories on brain function and addiction.

Article Abstract

Rationale: Substance use peaks during the developmental period known as emerging adulthood (ages 18-25), but not every individual who uses substances during this period engages in frequent or problematic use. Although individual differences in neurocognition appear to predict use severity, mechanistic neurocognitive risk factors with clear links to both behavior and neural circuitry have yet to be identified. Here, we aim to do so with an approach rooted in computational psychiatry, an emerging field in which formal models are used to identify candidate biobehavioral dimensions that confer risk for psychopathology.

Objectives: We test whether lower efficiency of evidence accumulation (EEA), a computationally characterized individual difference variable that drives performance on the go/no-go and other neurocognitive tasks, is a risk factor for substance use in emerging adults.

Methods And Results: In an fMRI substudy within a sociobehavioral longitudinal study (n = 106), we find that lower EEA and reductions in a robust neural-level correlate of EEA (error-related activations in salience network structures) measured at ages 18-21 are both prospectively related to greater substance use during ages 22-26, even after adjusting for other well-known risk factors. Results from Bayesian model comparisons corroborated inferences from conventional hypothesis testing and provided evidence that both EEA and its neuroimaging correlates contain unique predictive information about substance use involvement.

Conclusions: These findings highlight EEA as a computationally characterized neurocognitive risk factor for substance use during a critical developmental period, with clear links to both neuroimaging measures and well-established formal theories of brain function.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8452274PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-021-05885-wDOI Listing

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