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Probabilistic reward- and punishment-based learning in opioid addiction: Experimental and computational data

机译:阿片类药物成瘾中基于概率奖励和惩罚的学习:实验和计算数据

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Addiction is the continuation of a habit in spite of negative consequences. A vast literature gives evidence that this poor decision-making behavior in individuals addicted to drugs also generalizes to laboratory decision making tasks, suggesting that the impairment in decision-making is not limited to decisions about taking drugs. In the current experiment, opioid-addicted individuals and matched controls with no history of illicit drug use were administered a probabilistic classification task that embeds both reward-based and punishment-based learning trials, and a computational model of decision making was applied to understand the mechanisms describing individuals' performance on the task. Although behavioral results showed that opioid-addicted individuals performed as well as controls on both reward- and punishment-based learning, the modeling results suggested subtle differences in how decisions were made between the two groups. Specifically, the opioid-addicted group showed decreased tendency to repeat prior responses, meaning that they were more likely to "chase reward" when expectancies were violated, whereas controls were more likely to stick with a previously-successful response rule, despite occasional expectancy violations. This tendency to chase short-term reward, potentially at the expense of developing rules that maximize reward over the long term, may be a contributing factor to opioid addiction. Further work is indicated to better understand whether this tendency arises as a result of brain changes in the wake of continued opioid use/abuse, or might be a pre-existing factor that may contribute to risk for addiction. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
机译:尽管有负面后果,成瘾是习惯的延续。大量文献提供的证据表明,沉迷于毒品的个体的不良决策行为也普遍适用于实验室决策任务,这表明决策过程中的障碍不仅限于服用药物的决策。在当前的实验中,对阿片类药物成瘾者和没有非法药物使用史的匹配对照者进行了概率分类任务,该任务嵌入了基于奖励和基于惩罚的学习试验,并且采用了决策的计算模型来理解描述个人在任务中表现的机制。尽管行为结果表明,对阿片类药物成瘾的个体在基于奖励和惩罚的学习上表现出色,并且控制效果良好,但建模结果表明,两组人在决策方式上存在细微的差异。特别是,阿片类药物成瘾的人群重复先前反应的趋势有所降低,这意味着他们在违反预期的情况下更有可能“追逐奖励”,而尽管偶尔有违反预期的情况,但对照组更有可能坚持以前成功的反应规则。这种追求短期奖励的趋势可能会以制定长期奖励最大化的规则为代价,这可能是阿片类药物成瘾的一个促成因素。已表明需要进一步开展工作,以更好地了解这种趋势是否是由于持续使用/滥用阿片类药物后脑部变化而引起的,或者可能是可能导致成瘾风险的预先存在的因素。 (C)2015 Elsevier B.V.保留所有权利。

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