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酒精依赖和病态赌博中的偶然性学习:学习与忘却奖励偶然性

Contingency learning in alcohol dependence and pathological gambling: learning and unlearning reward contingencies.

作者信息

Vanes Lucy D, van Holst Ruth J, Jansen Jochem M, van den Brink Wim, Oosterlaan Jaap, Goudriaan Anna E

机构信息

Department of Psychiatry , Amsterdam Institute for Addiction Research, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Department of Cognitive Psychology , University of Tuebingen, Tuebingen, Germany.

出版信息

Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2014 Jun;38(6):1602-10. doi: 10.1111/acer.12393. Epub 2014 May 12.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Patients with alcohol dependence (AD) and pathological gambling (PG) are characterized by dysfunctional reward processing and their ability to adapt to alterations of reward contingencies is impaired. However, most neurocognitive tasks investigating reward processing involve a complex mix of elements, such as working memory, immediate and delayed rewards, and risk-taking. As a consequence, it is not clear whether contingency learning is altered in AD or PG. Therefore, the current study aimed to examine performance in a deterministic contingency learning task, investigating discrimination, reversal, and extinction learning.

METHODS

Thirty-three alcohol-dependent patients (ADs), 28 pathological gamblers (PGs), and 18 healthy controls (HCs) performed a contingency learning task in which they learned stimulus-reward associations that were first reversed and later extinguished while receiving deterministic feedback throughout. Accumulated points, number of perseverative errors and trials required to reach a criterion in each learning phase were compared between groups using nonparametric Kruskal-Wallis rank-sum tests. Regression analyses were performed to compare learning curves.

RESULTS

PGs and ADs did not differ from HCs in discrimination learning, reversal learning, or extinction learning, on the nonparametric tests. Regression analyses, however, showed differences in the initial speed of learning: PGs were significantly faster in discrimination learning compared to ADs, and both PGs and ADs learned slower than HCs in the reversal learning and extinction phases of the task.

CONCLUSIONS

Learning rates for reversal and extinction were slower for the alcohol-dependent group and PG group compared to HCs, suggesting that reversing and extinguishing learned contingencies require more effort in ADs and PGs. This implicates a diminished flexibility to overcome previously learned contingencies.

摘要

背景

酒精依赖(AD)和病态赌博(PG)患者的特征是奖赏处理功能失调,且他们适应奖赏意外变化的能力受损。然而,大多数研究奖赏处理的神经认知任务涉及多种复杂元素的混合,如工作记忆、即时和延迟奖赏以及冒险行为。因此,尚不清楚AD或PG患者的意外学习是否发生改变。所以,本研究旨在考察在确定性意外学习任务中的表现,研究辨别、反转和消退学习。

方法

33名酒精依赖患者(AD组)、28名病态赌博者(PG组)和18名健康对照者(HC组)完成一项意外学习任务,他们学习刺激 - 奖赏关联,该关联首先被反转,随后被消退,同时在整个过程中接收确定性反馈。使用非参数Kruskal - Wallis秩和检验比较各组在每个学习阶段积累的点数、持续性错误数量以及达到标准所需的试验次数。进行回归分析以比较学习曲线。

结果

在非参数检验中,PG组和AD组在辨别学习、反转学习或消退学习方面与HC组没有差异。然而,回归分析显示学习初始速度存在差异:与AD组相比,PG组在辨别学习中明显更快,并且在任务的反转学习和消退阶段,PG组和AD组的学习速度都比HC组慢。

结论

与HC组相比,酒精依赖组和PG组的反转和消退学习率较慢,这表明在AD患者和PG患者中,反转和消除已习得的意外情况需要更多努力。这意味着克服先前习得的意外情况的灵活性降低。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/8250/4171748/fb441182f074/acer0038-1602-f1.jpg

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