Brevers Damien, Bechara Antoine, Cleeremans Axel, Kornreich Charles, Verbanck Paul, Noël Xavier
Department of Psychology, and Brain and Creativity Institute, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; Psychological Medicine Laboratory, Faculty of Medicine, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Brussels, Belgium.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2014 Jul;38(7):1924-31. doi: 10.1111/acer.12447. Epub 2014 Jun 19.
Alcohol dependence is associated with poor decision-making under ambiguity, that is, when decisions are to be made in the absence of known probabilities of reward and loss. However, little is known regarding decisions made by individuals with alcohol dependence in the context of known probabilities (decision under risk). In this study, we investigated the relative contribution of these distinct aspects of decision-making to alcohol dependence.
Thirty recently detoxified and sober asymptomatic alcohol-dependent individuals and 30 healthy control participants were tested for decision-making under ambiguity (using the Iowa Gambling Task[IGT]) and decision-making under risk (using the Cups Task and Coin Flipping Task). We also tested their capacities for working memory storage (digit span forward) and dual tasking (operation span task).
Compared to healthy control participants, alcohol-dependent individuals made disadvantageous decisions on the IGT, reflecting poor decisions under ambiguity. They also made more risky choices on the Cups and Coin Flipping Tasks reflecting poor decision-making under risk. In addition, alcohol-dependent participants showed some working memory impairments, as measured by the dual tasking, and the degree of this impairment correlated with high-risk decision-making, thus suggesting a relationship between processes subserving working memory and risky decisions.
These results suggest that alcohol-dependent individuals are impaired in their ability to decide optimally in multiple facets of uncertainty (i.e., both risk and ambiguity) and that at least some aspects of these deficits are linked to poor working memory processes.
酒精依赖与在模糊情境下的决策能力差有关,也就是说,当在奖励和损失概率未知的情况下做出决策时。然而,对于酒精依赖个体在已知概率情境下(风险决策)所做的决策了解甚少。在本研究中,我们调查了决策的这些不同方面对酒精依赖的相对贡献。
对30名近期戒酒且无症状的酒精依赖个体和30名健康对照参与者进行了模糊情境下的决策测试(使用爱荷华赌博任务[IGT])和风险决策测试(使用杯子任务和抛硬币任务)。我们还测试了他们的工作记忆存储能力(顺背数字广度)和双重任务能力(运算广度任务)。
与健康对照参与者相比,酒精依赖个体在IGT上做出了不利决策,反映出在模糊情境下决策能力差。他们在杯子任务和抛硬币任务上也做出了更多风险选择,反映出在风险情境下决策能力差。此外,酒精依赖参与者表现出一些工作记忆损伤,通过双重任务测量,这种损伤程度与高风险决策相关,因此表明支持工作记忆的过程与风险决策之间存在关联。
这些结果表明,酒精依赖个体在多种不确定性方面(即风险和模糊性)做出最优决策的能力受损,并且这些缺陷的至少某些方面与不良的工作记忆过程有关。