Graduate Program in Neuroscience & Medical Scientist Training Program, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, 55455, USA.
Department of Neuroscience, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, 55455, USA.
Nat Commun. 2018 Jun 28;9(1):2521. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-04967-2.
Neuroeconomic theories propose changes in decision making drive relapse in recovering drug addicts, resulting in continued drug use despite stated wishes not to. Such conflict is thought to arise from multiple valuation systems dependent on separable neural components, yet many neurobiology of addiction studies employ only simple tests of value. Here, we tested in mice how prolonged abstinence from different drugs affects behavior in a neuroeconomic foraging task that reveals multiple tests of value. Abstinence from repeated cocaine and morphine disrupts separable decision-making processes. Cocaine alters deliberation-like behavior prior to choosing a preferred though economically unfavorable offer, while morphine disrupts re-evaluations after rapid initial decisions. These findings suggest that different drugs have long-lasting effects precipitating distinct decision-making vulnerabilities. Our approach can guide future refinement of decision-making behavioral paradigms and highlights how grossly similar behavioral maladaptations may mask multiple underlying, parallel, and dissociable processes that treatments for addiction could potentially target.
神经经济学理论提出,决策的变化导致正在康复的药物成瘾者复吸,尽管他们表示不愿意继续使用药物,但实际上却继续使用。这种冲突被认为是由多个依赖于可分离神经成分的估值系统引起的,但许多成瘾神经生物学研究仅使用简单的价值测试。在这里,我们在小鼠中测试了不同药物的长期戒断如何影响神经经济学觅食任务中的行为,该任务揭示了多种价值测试。对可卡因和吗啡的反复戒断会破坏可分离的决策过程。可卡因在选择偏好但经济上不利的报价之前改变了深思熟虑的行为,而吗啡则在快速初始决策后破坏了重新评估。这些发现表明,不同的药物具有持久的影响,会引发不同的决策脆弱性。我们的方法可以指导未来对决策行为范式的改进,并强调了行为适应不良可能掩盖潜在的、平行的和可分离的过程,而这些过程可能是成瘾治疗的潜在目标。