Department of Psychology, Center for Development and Behavioral Neuroscience, Binghamton University, State University of New York, Binghamton, NY 13902-6000, USA.
Dev Psychobiol. 2010 Apr;52(3):236-43. doi: 10.1002/dev.20457.
Age-related patterns of sensitivity to appetitive and aversive stimuli seemingly have deep evolutionary roots, with marked developmental transformations seen during adolescence in a number of relatively ancient brain systems critical for motivating and directing reward-related behaviors. Using a simple animal model of adolescence in the rat, adolescents have been shown to be more sensitive than their adult counterparts to positive rewarding effects of alcohol, other drugs, and certain natural stimuli, while being less sensitive to the aversive properties of such stimuli. Adolescent-typical alcohol sensitivities may be exacerbated further by a history of prior stress or alcohol exposure as well as by genetic vulnerabilities, permitting relatively high levels of adolescent alcohol use and perhaps an increased probability for the emergence of abuse disorders. A number of potential (albeit tentative) implications of these basic research findings for prevention science are considered.
年龄相关的对奖赏和惩罚刺激的敏感性模式似乎有着深远的进化根源,在许多相对古老的大脑系统中,青少年期出现了明显的发育转变,这些系统对于激励和引导与奖励相关的行为至关重要。在大鼠的简单青春期动物模型中,与成年大鼠相比,青少年对酒精、其他药物和某些自然刺激的积极奖赏作用更为敏感,而对这些刺激的厌恶特性则不那么敏感。先前的压力或酒精暴露史以及遗传脆弱性可能会进一步加剧青少年特有的酒精敏感性,从而允许相对较高水平的青少年饮酒,并且可能增加滥用障碍出现的可能性。考虑到这些基础研究结果对预防科学的一些潜在(尽管是初步的)影响。