Dennhardt Ashley A, Yurasek Ali M, Murphy James G
The University of Memphis.
J Exp Anal Behav. 2015 Jan;103(1):125-40. doi: 10.1002/jeab.121. Epub 2014 Dec 22.
The present study examined (1) the impact of a brief substance use intervention on delay discounting and indices of substance reward value (RV), and (2) whether baseline values and posttreatment change in these behavioral economic variables predict substance use outcomes. Participants were 97 heavy drinking college students (58.8% female, 41.2% male) who completed a brief motivational intervention (BMI) and then were randomized to one of two conditions: a supplemental behavioral economic intervention that attempted to increase engagement in substance-free activities associated with delayed rewards (SFAS) or an Education control (EDU). Demand intensity, and Omax, decreased and elasticity significantly increased after treatment, but there was no effect for condition. Both baseline values and change in RV, but not discounting, predicted substance use outcomes at 6-month follow-up. Students with high RV who used marijuana were more likely to reduce their use after the SFAS intervention. These results suggest that brief interventions may reduce substance reward value, and that changes in reward value are associated with subsequent drinking and drug use reductions. High RV marijuana users may benefit from intervention elements that enhance future time orientation and substance-free activity participation.
(1)简短的物质使用干预对延迟折扣和物质奖励价值(RV)指标的影响;(2)这些行为经济学变量的基线值和治疗后变化是否能预测物质使用结果。研究参与者为97名重度饮酒的大学生(58.8%为女性,41.2%为男性),他们完成了一次简短的动机干预(BMI),然后被随机分配到两种情况之一:一种补充性的行为经济学干预,试图增加与延迟奖励相关的无物质活动(SFAS)的参与度,或一种教育对照组(EDU)。治疗后,需求强度和Omax降低,弹性显著增加,但情况之间没有差异。RV的基线值和变化,而非折扣,在6个月随访时预测了物质使用结果。使用大麻且RV高的学生在SFAS干预后更有可能减少使用。这些结果表明,简短干预可能会降低物质奖励价值,且奖励价值的变化与随后饮酒和药物使用的减少有关。高RV的大麻使用者可能会从增强未来时间导向和参与无物质活动的干预元素中受益。