Jones Bradley O, Paladino Morgan S, Cruz Adelis M, Spencer Haley F, Kahanek Payton L, Scarborough Lauren N, Georges Sandra F, Smith Rachel J
Institute for Neuroscience, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA.
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA.
bioRxiv. 2023 Jun 9:2023.06.08.544242. doi: 10.1101/2023.06.08.544242.
Addiction is characterized by continued drug use despite negative consequences. In an animal model, a subset of rats continues to self-administer cocaine despite footshock consequences, showing punishment resistance. We sought to test the hypothesis that punishment resistance arises from failure to exert goal-directed control over habitual cocaine seeking. While habits are not inherently permanent or maladaptive, continued use of habits under conditions that should encourage goal-directed control makes them maladaptive and inflexible. We trained male and female Sprague Dawley rats on a seeking-taking chained schedule of cocaine self-administration (2 h/day). We then exposed them to 4 days of punishment testing, in which footshock (0.4 mA, 0.3 s) was delivered randomly on one-third of trials, immediately following completion of seeking and prior to extension of the taking lever. Before and after punishment testing (4 days pre-punishment and ≥4 days post-punishment), we assessed whether cocaine seeking was goal-directed or habitual using outcome devaluation via cocaine satiety. We found that punishment resistance was associated with continued use of habits, whereas punishment sensitivity was associated with increased goal-directed control. Although punishment resistance was not predicted by habitual responding pre-punishment, it was associated with habitual responding post-punishment. In parallel studies of food self-administration, we similarly observed that punishment resistance was associated with habitual responding post-punishment but not pre-punishment. These findings indicate that punishment resistance is related to habits that have become inflexible and persist under conditions that should encourage a transition to goal-directed behavior.
成瘾的特征是尽管有负面后果仍继续使用药物。在动物模型中,一部分大鼠尽管会受到电击后果,但仍继续自我注射可卡因,表现出对惩罚的抵抗。我们试图检验这样一种假设,即对惩罚的抵抗源于未能对习惯性可卡因寻求行为施加目标导向控制。虽然习惯本身并非永久不变或适应不良,但在应该鼓励目标导向控制的条件下持续使用习惯会使其变得适应不良且缺乏灵活性。我们对雄性和雌性斯普拉格-道利大鼠进行了可卡因自我给药的寻求-获取链式训练(每天2小时)。然后让它们接受4天的惩罚测试,在三分之一的试验中,在寻求行为完成后且在获取杠杆伸展之前,随机施加电击(0.4毫安,0.3秒)。在惩罚测试前后(惩罚前4天和惩罚后≥4天),我们通过可卡因饱腹感进行结果贬值评估,以确定可卡因寻求行为是目标导向的还是习惯性的。我们发现,对惩罚的抵抗与习惯的持续使用有关,而对惩罚的敏感则与目标导向控制的增强有关。虽然惩罚前的习惯性反应并不能预测对惩罚的抵抗,但它与惩罚后的习惯性反应有关。在食物自我给药的平行研究中,我们同样观察到,对惩罚的抵抗与惩罚后的习惯性反应有关,而与惩罚前无关。这些发现表明,对惩罚的抵抗与在应该鼓励向目标导向行为转变的条件下变得僵化且持续存在的习惯有关。