Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States; Department of Biomedical Engineering, School of Life Sciences, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing, China.
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2021 Jul 1;224:108731. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2021.108731. Epub 2021 Apr 24.
Peer influences figure prominently in young adult binge drinking. Women have trended to show a level of alcohol use on par with men during the last decades. It would be of interest to investigate the neural processes of social cognition that may underlie binge drinking and the potential sex differences.
Here, we examined the data of the Human Connectome Project where we identified a total of 175 binge drinkers (125 men) and 285 non-binge drinkers (97 men) performing a social cognition task during brain imaging. We analyzed the imaging data with published routines and evaluated the results at a corrected threshold.
Both male and female binge relative to non-binge drinkers showed higher perceived friendship. Binge relative to non-binge drinkers demonstrated diminished activations in the anterior medial orbitofrontal cortex (amOFC) during perception of social vs. random interaction, with a more prominent effect size in women. Further, whole-brain regression identified activity of the right posterior insula (rPI) in negative correlation with perceived friendship score in non-binge drinking women. Post-hoc analyses showed significant correlation of rPI activity with perceived friendship, amOFC activity, and a summary measure of alcohol use severity identified by principal component analysis, across all subjects. Mediation and path analysis demonstrated a significant model: amOFC activity → rPI activity → perceived friendship → severity of alcohol use.
These findings support peer influences on binge drinking and suggest neural correlates that may relate altered social cognitive processing to alcohol misuse in young adults.
同伴影响在青年成人狂饮中起着重要作用。在过去几十年中,女性的饮酒水平趋于与男性持平。研究可能导致狂饮的社会认知神经过程以及潜在的性别差异将是有趣的。
在这里,我们检查了人类连接组计划的数据,我们在该计划中总共识别出 175 名狂饮者(125 名男性)和 285 名非狂饮者(97 名男性),他们在进行大脑成像时执行社会认知任务。我们使用已发表的例程分析了成像数据,并在修正后的阈值处评估了结果。
与非狂饮者相比,男性和女性狂饮者的感知友谊都更高。与非狂饮者相比,狂饮者在感知社交与随机互动时,前内侧眶额皮质(amOFC)的激活减少,女性的影响更大。此外,全脑回归确定了右侧后岛叶(rPI)的活动与非狂饮女性的感知友谊评分呈负相关。事后分析显示,在所有受试者中,rPI 活动与感知友谊、amOFC 活动以及通过主成分分析确定的酒精使用严重程度的综合衡量指标之间存在显著相关性。中介和路径分析表明,该模型具有统计学意义:amOFC 活动→rPI 活动→感知友谊→酒精使用严重程度。
这些发现支持同伴对狂饮的影响,并表明可能与改变的社会认知处理相关的神经相关性与年轻人的酒精滥用有关。