Braams Barbara R, van Duijvenvoorde Anna C K, Peper Jiska S, Crone Eveline A
Institute of Psychology, Leiden University, 2333 AK, Leiden, The Netherlands, and Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, 2300 RC, Leiden, The Netherlands
Institute of Psychology, Leiden University, 2333 AK, Leiden, The Netherlands, and Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, 2300 RC, Leiden, The Netherlands.
J Neurosci. 2015 May 6;35(18):7226-38. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4764-14.2015.
Prior studies have highlighted adolescence as a period of increased risk-taking, which is postulated to result from an overactive reward system in the brain. Longitudinal studies are pivotal for testing these brain-behavior relations because individual slopes are more sensitive for detecting change. The aim of the current study was twofold: (1) to test patterns of age-related change (i.e., linear, quadratic, and cubic) in activity in the nucleus accumbens, a key reward region in the brain, in relation to change in puberty (self-report and testosterone levels), laboratory risk-taking and self-reported risk-taking tendency; and (2) to test whether individual differences in pubertal development and risk-taking behavior were contributors to longitudinal change in nucleus accumbens activity. We included 299 human participants at the first time point and 254 participants at the second time point, ranging between ages 8-27 years, time points were separated by a 2 year interval. Neural responses to rewards, pubertal development (self-report and testosterone levels), laboratory risk-taking (balloon analog risk task; BART), and self-reported risk-taking tendency (Behavior Inhibition System/Behavior Activation System questionnaire) were collected at both time points. The longitudinal analyses confirmed the quadratic age pattern for nucleus accumbens activity to rewards (peaking in adolescence), and the same quadratic pattern was found for laboratory risk-taking (BART). Nucleus accumbens activity change was further related to change in testosterone and self-reported reward-sensitivity (BAS Drive). Thus, this longitudinal analysis provides new insight in risk-taking and reward sensitivity in adolescence: (1) confirming an adolescent peak in nucleus accumbens activity, and (2) underlining a critical role for pubertal hormones and individual differences in risk-taking tendency.
先前的研究强调青春期是一个冒险行为增加的时期,据推测这是由大脑中过度活跃的奖励系统导致的。纵向研究对于检验这些脑与行为的关系至关重要,因为个体斜率对于检测变化更为敏感。本研究的目的有两个:(1)测试伏隔核(大脑中的一个关键奖励区域)活动中与年龄相关的变化模式(即线性、二次和三次模式),这些变化与青春期变化(自我报告和睾酮水平)、实验室冒险行为以及自我报告的冒险倾向之间的关系;(2)测试青春期发育和冒险行为的个体差异是否是伏隔核活动纵向变化的影响因素。我们在第一个时间点纳入了299名人类参与者,在第二个时间点纳入了254名参与者,年龄在8至27岁之间,两个时间点间隔2年。在两个时间点均收集了对奖励的神经反应、青春期发育情况(自我报告和睾酮水平)、实验室冒险行为(气球模拟风险任务;BART)以及自我报告的冒险倾向(行为抑制系统/行为激活系统问卷)。纵向分析证实了伏隔核对奖励的活动呈现二次年龄模式(在青春期达到峰值),实验室冒险行为(BART)也呈现相同的二次模式。伏隔核活动变化还与睾酮变化以及自我报告的奖励敏感性(BAS驱力)相关。因此,这项纵向分析为青春期的冒险行为和奖励敏感性提供了新的见解:(1)证实了伏隔核活动在青春期达到峰值,(2)强调了青春期激素和冒险倾向个体差异的关键作用。