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Shared neural basis of social and non-social reward deficits in chronic cocaine users
Author(s) -
Philippe N. Tobler,
Katrin H. Preller,
Daniel Campbell-Meiklejohn,
Matthias Kirschner,
Rainer Kraehenmann,
Philipp Stämpfli,
Marcus Herdener,
Erich Seifritz,
Boris B. Quednow
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
social cognitive and affective neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.229
H-Index - 103
eISSN - 1749-5024
pISSN - 1749-5016
DOI - 10.1093/scan/nsw030
Subject(s) - psychology , orbitofrontal cortex , ventromedial prefrontal cortex , addiction , stimulant , reward system , prefrontal cortex , brain stimulation reward , neural correlates of consciousness , cognitive psychology , neuroscience , developmental psychology , dopamine , cognition , psychiatry , nucleus accumbens
Changed reward functions have been proposed as a core feature of stimulant addiction, typically observed as reduced neural responses to non-drug-related rewards. However, it was unclear yet how specific this deficit is for different types of non-drug rewards arising from social and non-social reinforcements. We used functional neuroimaging in cocaine users to investigate explicit social reward as modeled by agreement of music preferences with music experts. In addition, we investigated non-social reward as modeled by winning desired music pieces. The study included 17 chronic cocaine users and 17 matched stimulant-naive healthy controls. Cocaine users, compared with controls, showed blunted neural responses to both social and non-social reward. Activation differences were located in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex overlapping for both reward types and, thus, suggesting a non-specific deficit in the processing of non-drug rewards. Interestingly, in the posterior lateral orbitofrontal cortex, social reward responses of cocaine users decreased with the degree to which they were influenced by social feedback from the experts, a response pattern that was opposite to that observed in healthy controls. The present results suggest that cocaine users likely suffer from a generalized impairment in value representation as well as from an aberrant processing of social feedback.

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