Department of Psychology, Gonzaga University.
Department of Psychology, University of Texas at San Antonio.
Exp Clin Psychopharmacol. 2024 Jun;32(3):295-304. doi: 10.1037/pha0000699. Epub 2023 Dec 21.
Cannabis use and cannabis use disorder diagnoses continue to increase in United States college-aged students as more states legalize recreational cannabis. Previous studies have attempted to associate cannabis use with delay discount rates, which involves participants making choices for smaller sooner versus larger later hypothetical rewards. More smaller sooner choices result in higher discount rates and suggest increased impulsivity. Delay discounting studies have shown a significant, but small effect size with people who use cannabis more likely to choose the smaller sooner rewards, relative to people who do not use cannabis. The present study tested whether students with different experience using cannabis (people who currently use cannabis, people who formerly used cannabis, or people who never used cannabis) would be sensitive to sharing a proportion of hypothetical marijuana with another individual at a given social distance, as a putative measure for cannabis value. Results from two separate data sets showed that students classified as current cannabis users were significantly less likely to share a proportion of hypothetical marijuana across a range of social distances, relative to students that self-reported never using cannabis. Students classified as either former or current users were not statistically different. These results were consistent with previous delay discounting results and showed a medium effect size (η² ≥ 0.10) for each data set, both separately and when combined. These results indicate that social distance is a meaningful variable that can be used in a modified discounting task to assess differential cannabis value in a student population who are increasingly susceptible to cannabis use disorder. These results may have future clinical implications. Social discount rates for cannabis may be able to differentiate individuals who will continue recreational use versus individuals that may develop cannabis dependence problems. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
大麻的使用和大麻使用障碍的诊断在美国大学生中继续增加,因为越来越多的州使娱乐用大麻合法化。先前的研究试图将大麻的使用与延迟折扣率联系起来,这涉及到参与者对较小的即时奖励与较大的延迟奖励进行选择。更多的较小的即时奖励会导致更高的折扣率,并表明冲动性增加。延迟折扣研究表明,与不使用大麻的人相比,更多使用大麻的人更有可能选择较小的即时奖励,这具有显著但较小的效应量。本研究测试了具有不同大麻使用经验的学生(当前使用大麻的人、以前使用过大麻的人或从未使用过大麻的人)是否会对在特定社交距离下与另一个人分享一定比例的假设大麻产生敏感性,作为大麻价值的一种推测衡量标准。来自两个独立数据集的结果表明,与自我报告从未使用过大麻的学生相比,被归类为当前大麻使用者的学生在一系列社交距离下分享一定比例的假设大麻的可能性显著降低。被归类为以前或当前使用者的学生在统计学上没有差异。这些结果与先前的延迟折扣结果一致,并显示出每个数据集的中等效应量(η²≥0.10),单独和组合时均如此。这些结果表明,社交距离是一个有意义的变量,可以在修改后的折扣任务中使用,以评估对越来越容易受到大麻使用障碍影响的学生群体的不同大麻价值。这些结果可能具有未来的临床意义。大麻的社交折扣率可能能够区分继续进行娱乐性使用的个体与可能发展为大麻依赖问题的个体。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2024 APA,保留所有权利)。