MacKillop James
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, Peter Boris Centre for Addictions Research, McMaster University/St Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Homewood Research Institute, Homewood Health Centre, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2016 Apr;40(4):672-85. doi: 10.1111/acer.13004. Epub 2016 Mar 19.
Behavioral economics and neuroeconomics bring together perspectives and methods from psychology, economics, and cognitive neuroscience to understand decision making and choice behavior. Extending an operant behavioral theoretical framework, these perspectives have increasingly been applied to understand the alcohol use disorders (AUDs), and this review surveys the theory, methods, and findings from this approach. The focus is on 3 key behavioral economic concepts: delay discounting (i.e., preferences for smaller immediate rewards relative to larger delayed rewards), alcohol demand (i.e., alcohol's reinforcing value), and proportionate alcohol-related reinforcement (i.e., relative amount of psychosocial reinforcement associated with alcohol use).
Delay discounting has been linked to AUDs in both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies and has been investigated cross-sectionally using neuroimaging. Alcohol demand and proportionate alcohol-related reinforcement have both been robustly associated with drinking and alcohol misuse cross-sectionally, but not over time. Both have also been found to predict treatment response to brief interventions. Alcohol demand has also been used to enhance the measurement of acute motivation for alcohol in laboratory studies. Interventions that focus on reducing the value of alcohol by increasing alternative reinforcement and response cost have been found to be efficacious, albeit in relatively small numbers of randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Mediators and moderators of response to these interventions have not been extensively investigated.
The application of behavioral economics and neuroeconomics to AUDs has given rise to an extensive body of empirical work, although significant gaps in knowledge remain. In particular, there is a need for more longitudinal investigations to clarify the etiological roles of these behavioral economic processes, especially alcohol demand and proportionate alcohol reinforcement. Additional RCTs are needed to extend and generalize the findings for reinforcement-based interventions and to investigate mediators and moderators of treatment success for optimization. Applying neuroeconomics to AUDs remains at an early stage and has been primarily descriptive to date, but has high potential for important translational insights into the future. The same is true for using these behavioral economic indicators to understand genetic influences on AUDs.
行为经济学和神经经济学融合了心理学、经济学和认知神经科学的观点与方法,以理解决策制定和选择行为。这些观点在扩展操作性行为理论框架的基础上,越来越多地被用于理解酒精使用障碍(AUDs),本综述调查了该方法的理论、方法和研究结果。重点关注三个关键的行为经济学概念:延迟折扣(即相对于更大的延迟奖励,对较小即时奖励的偏好)、酒精需求(即酒精的强化价值)和与酒精相关的比例强化(即与酒精使用相关的心理社会强化的相对量)。
在横断面研究和纵向研究中,延迟折扣都与酒精使用障碍有关,并且已经通过神经影像学进行了横断面研究。酒精需求和与酒精相关的比例强化在横断面研究中都与饮酒和酒精滥用密切相关,但随着时间推移并非如此。两者也都被发现可以预测对简短干预的治疗反应。酒精需求也被用于加强实验室研究中对酒精急性动机的测量。尽管在相对较少的随机对照试验(RCT)中,但已发现通过增加替代强化和反应成本来降低酒精价值的干预措施是有效的。对这些干预措施反应的中介因素和调节因素尚未得到广泛研究。
行为经济学和神经经济学在酒精使用障碍方面的应用已经产生了大量的实证研究工作,尽管知识上仍存在重大差距。特别是,需要更多的纵向研究来阐明这些行为经济过程的病因学作用,尤其是酒精需求和比例酒精强化。需要更多的随机对照试验来扩展和推广基于强化的干预措施的研究结果,并调查治疗成功的中介因素和调节因素以进行优化。将神经经济学应用于酒精使用障碍仍处于早期阶段,迄今为止主要是描述性的,但对未来具有重要转化见解的潜力很大。使用这些行为经济指标来理解基因对酒精使用障碍的影响也是如此。