22 results on '"Bjork, James M"'
Search Results
2. The Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study: Imaging acquisition across 21 sites
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Casey, BJ, Cannonier, Tariq, Conley, May I, Cohen, Alexandra O, Barch, Deanna M, Heitzeg, Mary M, Soules, Mary E, Teslovich, Theresa, Dellarco, Danielle V, Garavan, Hugh, Orr, Catherine A, Wager, Tor D, Banich, Marie T, Speer, Nicole K, Sutherland, Matthew T, Riedel, Michael C, Dick, Anthony S, Bjork, James M, Thomas, Kathleen M, Chaarani, Bader, Mejia, Margie H, Hagler, Donald J, Cornejo, M Daniela, Sicat, Chelsea S, Harms, Michael P, Dosenbach, Nico UF, Rosenberg, Monica, Earl, Eric, Bartsch, Hauke, Watts, Richard, Polimeni, Jonathan R, Kuperman, Joshua M, Fair, Damien A, Dale, Anders M, and Workgroup, the ABCD Imaging Acquisition
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Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Biomedical Imaging ,Substance Misuse ,Brain Disorders ,Pediatric ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Development ,Brain ,Cognition ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Addiction ,Adolescence ,Development ,Impulsivity ,Memory ,Reward ,ABCD Imaging Acquisition Workgroup ,Clinical Sciences ,Cognitive Sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
The ABCD study is recruiting and following the brain development and health of over 10,000 9-10 year olds through adolescence. The imaging component of the study was developed by the ABCD Data Analysis and Informatics Center (DAIC) and the ABCD Imaging Acquisition Workgroup. Imaging methods and assessments were selected, optimized and harmonized across all 21 sites to measure brain structure and function relevant to adolescent development and addiction. This article provides an overview of the imaging procedures of the ABCD study, the basis for their selection and preliminary quality assurance and results that provide evidence for the feasibility and age-appropriateness of procedures and generalizability of findings to the existent literature.
- Published
- 2018
3. Caffeinated Soda Intake in Children Is Associated with Neurobehavioral Risk Factors for Substance Misuse.
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Mina Kwon, Hyeonjin Kim, Jaeyeong Yang, Yoseph Lee, Hur, Jihyun K., Tae-Ho Lee, Bjork, James M., and Woo-Young Ahn
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BRAIN physiology ,SUBSTANCE abuse risk factors ,ADOLESCENT development ,DRINKING (Physiology) ,CROSS-sectional method ,IMPULSIVE personality ,NEUROLOGIC manifestations of general diseases ,RISK assessment ,CARBONATED beverages ,CAFFEINE ,SHORT-term memory ,REWARD (Psychology) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background and objectives Use of psychotropic substances in childhood has been associated with both impulsivity and other manifestations of poor executive function as well as escalation over time to use of progressively stronger substances. However, how this relationship may start in earlier childhood has not been well explored. Here, we investigated the neurobehavioral correlates of daily caffeinated soda consumption in preadolescent children and examined whether caffeinated soda intake is associated with a higher risk of subsequent alcohol initiation. Methods Using Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study data (N = 2,092), we first investigated cross-sectional relationships between frequent caffeinated soda intake and well-known risk factors of substance misuse: impaired working memory, high impulsivity, and aberrant reward processing. We then examined whether caffeinated soda intake at baseline predicts more alcohol sipping at 12 months follow-up using a machine learning algorithm. Results Daily consumption of caffeinated soda was cross-sectionally associated with neurobehavioral risk factors for substance misuse such as higher impulsivity scores and lower working memory performance. Furthermore, caffeinated soda intake predicted a 2.04 times greater likelihood of alcohol sipping after 12 months, even after controlling for rates of baseline alcohol sipping rates. Conclusions These findings suggest that previous linkages between caffeine and substance use in adolescence also extend to younger initiation, and may stem from core neurocognitive features thought conducive to substance initiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. The ABCD Study of Neurodevelopment: Identifying Neurocircuit Targets for Prevention and Treatment of Adolescent Substance Abuse
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Bjork, James M., Straub, Lisa K., Provost, Rosellen G., and Neale, Michael C.
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- 2017
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5. Impulsivity and reduced quality of life in persons with paraplegia.
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Bjork, James M., Perrin, Paul B., Plonski, Paul E., Vassileva, Jasmin, and Goetz, Lance L.
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CLUSTER sampling , *SPINAL cord injuries , *IMPULSIVE personality , *SELF-evaluation , *SELF-management (Psychology) , *COGNITION , *SATISFACTION , *COMPARATIVE studies , *QUALITY of life , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *PARAPLEGIA , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *ADULTS - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Low Quality of Life (QoL) in persons with paraplegia may stem from impulsive behaviors. Impulsivity in persons with paraplegia and persistently low QoL has seldom been probed but could be targeted with cognitive behavioral therapies. OBJECTIVE: Determine how task-assessed and self-report impulsivity relate to quality of life (QoL) in adults with paraplegia. METHODS: In a preliminary study, 33 adults with paraplegia after traumatic SCI were administered verbal interviews on QoL from the PROMIS item bank at baseline and at six-month follow-up, along with several computerized metrics of impulsivity at baseline. RESULTS: A cluster of (n = 10) participants characterized by high levels of negative affect and low levels of resilience and life satisfaction across both baseline and follow-up showed significantly greater negative urgency impulsivity (p = 0.007) as well as significantly lower mindfulness and self-care in some domains (all p < 0.05), compared to the cluster of participants (n = 23) who showed higher life satisfaction and resilience. Behavioral metrics of delay discounting and rapid-response (motoric) impulsivity did not significantly differ (all p > 0.05) between the two clusters of participants. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that novel interventions that reduce trait impulsivity in other disorders could be applied to potentially reduce risk for reduced self-care and QoL in individuals with paraplegia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Impulsivity and Reflective Thinking in Veterans Seeking Care for Substance Use Disorder.
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Garavito, David M. N. and Bjork, James M.
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *THOUGHT & thinking , *VETERANS' hospitals , *COGNITION disorders , *IMPULSIVE personality , *ACQUISITION of data , *PSYCHOLOGY of veterans , *MEDICAL records , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *DECISION making - Abstract
Objective: Substance use disorder (SUD) is a major public health crisis, with increased overdose deaths in the past decade. This has coincided with a tremendous amount of research on those who misuse substances. However, extensive research on SUD vulnerability characteristics such as impulsivity may be complemented by research on theoretically relevant aspects of cognition. The Cognitive Reflection Test (CRT) was designed to measure a person's ability to subdue quick, intuitive decisions to reflect or deliberate. To some decision making theorists, this measure may help explain why some people are better able to inhibit "gut reactions" than others. Methods: We recruited 140 veterans from a Veterans Affairs medical center; 91 of whom were receiving SUD treatment. Participants completed the CRT and a measure of trait impulsivity (the UPPS-P). We ran planned ANCOVAs assessing differences in the number of correct answers on the CRT and the proportion of errors that were intuitive. Results: Participants who were receiving treatment gave significantly fewer correct, reflective answers on the CRT compared to controls. However, there were no significant differences in the proportion of errors that were due to intuitive responses. These findings did not change when controlling for age and/or trait impulsivity. Conclusion: Those suffering from SUD may exhibit cognitive deficits that do not stem from intuitive thinking. These deficits may, in turn, exacerbate issues arising from elevated impulsivity. Additional research which better incorporates decision making theory may be invaluable in providing clinically-relevant results and positive public health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. Developmental differences in striatal recruitment by reward prospects as a function of attentional demand.
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Sawyers, Chelsea, Straub, Lisa K., Gauntlett, Joseph, and Bjork, James M.
- Abstract
Adolescent risk-taking has been attributed to earlier-developing motivational neurocircuitry that is poorly controlled by immature executive-control neurocircuitry. Functional magnetic resonance imaging findings of increased ventral striatum (VS) recruitment by reward prospects in adolescents compared to adults support this theory. Other studies found blunted VS recruitment by reward-predictive cues in adolescents compared to adults. Task features may explain this discrepancy but have never been systematically explored. Adolescents and adults performed a novel reward task that holds constant the expected value of all rewards but varies whether rewards are dependent on vigilance-intensive responding versus making a lucky choice during a relaxed response window. We examined group by sub-task contrast differences in activation of VS and more motoric regions of striatum in response to anticipatory cues. Reward anticipation in both task conditions activated portions of striatum in both groups. In voxel-wise comparison, adults showed greater anticipatory recruitment of VS in trials involving choice during a relaxed time window, not in the more vigilance-demanding trials as hypothesized. In accord with our hypotheses, however, adults showed greater activation in dorsal striatum and putamen volumes of interest during reward anticipation under vigilance-demanding conditions. Following trial outcome notifications, adolescents showed greater activation of the VS during reward notification but lower activation during loss notification. These data extend findings of cross-sectional age-group differences in incentive-anticipatory recruitment of striatum, by demonstrating in adults relatively greater recruitment of motor effector regions of striatum by attentional and motor demands. • MIRTCh task captures attentional demand differences behaviorally and via BOLD signal. • High cognitive demand trials show larger striatal activation than low demand trials. • Adults engage visual attention motor circuitry more than teens in high demand trials. • Attentional demand and cognitive resources drive striatal activity in adults more than teens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Impulsivity and Medical Care Utilization in Veterans Treated for Substance Use Disorder.
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Bjork, James M., Reisweber, Jarrod, Burchett, Jason R., Plonski, Paul E., Konova, Anna B., Lopez-Guzman, Silvia, and Dismuke-Greer, Clara E.
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *EVALUATION of medical care , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *IMPULSIVE personality , *MEDICAL care , *PATIENT readmissions , *COGNITION , *RESIDENTIAL care , *DECISION making , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *VETERANS , *ADVERSE health care events - Abstract
Impulsivity has been defined by acting rashly during positive mood states (positive urgency; PU) or negative mood states (negative urgency; NU) and by excessive de-valuation of deferred rewards. These behaviors reflect a "live in the now" mentality that is not only characteristic of many individuals with severe substance use disorder (SUD) but also impedes medical treatment compliance and could result in repeated hospitalizations or other poor health outcomes. Purpose/objectives: We sought preliminary evidence that impulsivity may relate to adverse health outcomes in the veteran population. Impulsivity measured in 90 veterans receiving inpatient or outpatient SUD care at a Veterans Affairs Medical Center was related to histories of inpatient/residential care costs, based on VA Health Economics Resource Center data. Results: We found that positive urgency, lack of persistence and lack of premeditation, but not sensation-seeking or preference for immediate or risky rewards, were significantly higher in veterans with a history of one or more admissions for VA-based inpatient or residential health care that either included (n = 30) or did not include (n = 29) an admission for SUD care. Among veterans with a history of inpatient/residential care for SUD, NU and PU, but not decision-making behavior, correlated with SUD care-related costs. Conclusions/Importance: In veterans receiving SUD care, questionnaire-assessed trait impulsivity (but not decision-making) related to greater care utilization within the VA system. This suggests that veterans with high impulsivity are at greater risk for adverse health outcomes, such that expansion of cognitive interventions to reduce impulsivity may improve their health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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9. Associations between behavioral and self-reported impulsivity, brain structure, and genetic influences in middle childhood.
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Gilman, Jodi M., Kaur, Jasmeen, Tervo-Clemmens, Brenden, Potter, Kevin, Sanzo, Brandon T., Schuster, Randi M., Bjork, James M., Evins, A. Eden, Roffman, Joshua L., and Lee, Phil H.
- Abstract
Impulsivity undergoes a normative developmental trajectory from childhood to adulthood and is thought to be driven by maturation of brain structure. However, few large-scale studies have assessed associations between impulsivity, brain structure, and genetic susceptibility in children. In 9112 children ages 9–10 from the ABCD study, we explored relationships among impulsivity (UPPS-P impulsive behavior scale; delay discounting), brain structure (cortical thickness (CT), cortical volume (CV), and cortical area (CA)), and polygenic scores for externalizing behavior (PGS EXT). Both higher UPPS-P total scores and more severe delay-discounting had widespread, low-magnitude associations with smaller CA in frontal and temporal regions. No associations were seen between impulsivity and CV or CT. Additionally, higher PGS EXT was associated with both higher UPPS-P scores and with smaller CA and CV in frontal and temporal regions, but in non-overlapping cortical regions, underscoring the complex interplay between genetics and brain structure in influencing impulsivity. These findings indicate that, within large-scale population data, CA is significantly yet weakly associated with each of these impulsivity measures and with polygenic risk for externalizing behaviors, but in distinct brain regions. Future work should longitudinally assess these associations through adolescence, and examine associated functional outcomes, such as future substance use and psychopathology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Social Information Processing in Substance Use Disorders: Insights From an Emotional Go-Nogo Task.
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Bjork, James M., Keyser-Marcus, Lori, Vassileva, Jasmin, Ramey, Tatiana, Houghton, David C., and Moeller, F. Gerard
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SUBSTANCE abuse ,SOCIAL processes ,COCAINE-induced disorders ,INFORMATION processing ,OPIOID abuse ,ATTENTIONAL bias ,RESPONSE inhibition - Abstract
Positive social connections are crucial for recovery from Substance Use Disorder (SUD). Of interest is understanding potential social information processing (SIP) mediators of this effect. To explore whether persons with different SUD show idiosyncratic biases toward social signals, we administered an emotional go-nogo task (EGNG) to 31 individuals with Cocaine Use Disorder (CoUD), 31 with Cannabis Use Disorder (CaUD), 79 with Opioid Use Disorder (OUD), and 58 controls. Participants were instructed to respond to emotional faces (Fear/Happy) but withhold responses to expressionless faces in two task blocks, with the reverse instruction in the other two blocks. Emotional faces as non-targets elicited more "false alarm" (FA) commission errors as a main effect. Groups did not differ in overall rates of hits (correct responses to target faces), but participants with CaUD and CoUD showed reduced rates of hits (relative to controls) when expressionless faces were targets. OUD participants had worse hit rates [and slower reaction times (RT)] when fearful faces (but not happy faces) were targets. CaUD participants were most affected by instruction effects (respond/"go" vs withhold response/"no-go" to emotional face) on discriminability statistic A. Participants were faster to respond to happy face targets than to expressionless faces. However, this pattern was reversed in fearful face blocks in OUD and CoUD participants. This experiment replicated previous findings of the greater salience of expressive face images, and extends this finding to SUD, where persons with CaUD may show even greater bias toward emotional faces. Conversely, OUD participants showed idiosyncratic behavior in response to fearful faces suggestive of increased attentional disruption by fear. These data suggest a mechanism by which positive social signals may contribute to recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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11. The Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study: Imaging acquisition across 21 sites.
- Author
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Casey, B.J., Cannonier, Tariq, Conley, May I., Cohen, Alexandra O., Barch, Deanna M., Heitzeg, Mary M., Soules, Mary E., Teslovich, Theresa, Dellarco, Danielle V., Garavan, Hugh, Orr, Catherine A., Wager, Tor D., Banich, Marie T., Speer, Nicole K., Sutherland, Matthew T., Riedel, Michael C., Dick, Anthony S., Bjork, James M., Thomas, Kathleen M., and Chaarani, Bader
- Abstract
The ABCD study is recruiting and following the brain development and health of over 10,000 9–10 year olds through adolescence. The imaging component of the study was developed by the ABCD Data Analysis and Informatics Center (DAIC) and the ABCD Imaging Acquisition Workgroup. Imaging methods and assessments were selected, optimized and harmonized across all 21 sites to measure brain structure and function relevant to adolescent development and addiction. This article provides an overview of the imaging procedures of the ABCD study, the basis for their selection and preliminary quality assurance and results that provide evidence for the feasibility and age-appropriateness of procedures and generalizability of findings to the existent literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Laboratory impulsivity and depression in blast-exposed military personnel with post-concussion syndrome.
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Bjork, James M., Burroughs, Thomas K., Franke, Laura M., Pickett, Treven C., Johns, Sade E., Moeller, F. Gerard, and Walker, William C.
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POSTCONCUSSION syndrome , *MENTAL depression , *BLAST injuries , *MILITARY personnel's injuries , *IMPULSE (Psychology) , *BRAIN injuries - Abstract
In military populations, traumatic brain injury (TBI) also holds potential to increase impulsivity and impair mood regulation due to blast injury effects on ventral frontal cortex – to put military personnel at risk for suicide or substance abuse. We assessed a linkage between depression and impaired behavioral inhibition in 117 blast-exposed service members (SM) and veterans with post-concussion syndrome (PCS), where PCS was defined using a Rivermead Postconcussive Symptom Questionnaire (RPQ) modified to clarify whether each symptom worsened compared to pre-blast. Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D) scores, PTSD Checklist 5 (PCL-5) scores, and RPQ raw subscale scores correlated positively with commission and perseverative errors on the continuous performance test II (CPT-II). In contrast, the number of RPQ symptoms ostensibly worsened post-blast did not correlate with impulsive errors on the CPT-II. These data replicate earlier findings that link increased affective symptomatology to impaired behavior inhibition in military TBI populations, but where additional effects on impulsivity from the blast itself remain equivocal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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13. Attentional function and inhibitory control in different substance use disorders.
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Bjork, James M., Keyser-Marcus, Lori, Vassileva, Jasmin, Ramey, Tatiana, Houghton, David C., and Moeller, F. Gerard
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ATTENTION , *RESPONSE inhibition , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *MARIJUANA abuse , *COCAINE-induced disorders - Abstract
• We administered the attentional network task to controls and to persons with cocaine use disorder (CoUD), cannabis use disorder (CaUD), opioid use disorder (OUD). • After controlling for group differences in sex representation and age, both OUD and CaUD participants showed blunted alerting effects compared to controls. • After controlling for sex representation and age, both CaUD and CoUD participants showed greater conflict effects of target-incongruent stimuli than controls. • No substance use disorder (SUD) group showed prolonged stop-signal reaction time compared to controls. • These data indicate differences in components of attentional function between persons with SUD as a function of the substance of choice. Attentional function in substance use disorder (SUD) is not well understood. To probe attentional function in SUD as a function of primary substance of abuse, we administered the attentional network task (ANT) to 44 individuals with Cocaine Use Disorder (CoUD), 49 individuals with Cannabis Use Disorder (CaUD), 86 individuals with Opioid Use Disorder (OUD), and 107 controls with no SUD, along with the stop-signal task (SST). The ANT quantifies the effects of (temporal) alerting cues and (spatial) orienting cues to reduce reaction time (RT) to targets, as well as probing how conflicting (target-incongruent) stimuli slow RT. The SST quantifies individuals' ability to inhibit already-initiated motor responses. After controlling for sex representation and age, OUD and CaUD participants showed blunted alerting effects compared to controls, whereas CaUD and CoUD participants showed greater stimulus conflict (flanker) effects. Finally, CoUD participants showed a trend toward increased orienting ability. In SST performance, no SUD group showed a prolonged stop-signal reaction compared to controls. However, the OUD group (and CoUD group at trend level) showed prolonged "go" RT to targets and reduced hit rates. These data indicate differences in attentional function in persons with SUD as a function of the primary substance use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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14. Mesolimbic recruitment by nondrug rewards in detoxified alcoholics: Effort anticipation, reward anticipation, and reward delivery.
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Bjork, James M., Smith, Ashley R., Chen, Gang, and Hommer, Daniel W.
- Abstract
Aberrant sensitivity of incentive neurocircuitry to nondrug rewards has been suggested as either a risk factor for or consequence of drug addiction. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we tested whether alcohol-dependent patients (ADP: n = 29) showed altered recruitment of ventral striatal (VS) incentive neurocircuitry compared to controls ( n = 23) by: (1) cues to respond for monetary rewards, (2) post-response anticipation of rewards, or (3) delivery of rewards. Using an instrumental task with two-stage presentation of reward-predictive information, subjects saw cues signaling opportunities to win $0, $1, or $10 for responding to a target. Following this response, subjects were notified whether their success would be indicated by a lexical notification ('Hit?') or by delivery of a monetary reward ('Win?'). After a variable interval, subjects then viewed the trial outcome. We found no significant group differences in voxelwise activation by task contrasts, or in signal change extracted from VS. Both ADP and controls showed significant VS and other limbic recruitment by pre-response reward anticipation. In addition, controls also showed VS recruitment by post-response reward-anticipation, and ADP had appreciable subthreshold VS activation. Both groups also showed similar mesolimbic responses to reward deliveries. Across all subjects, a questionnaire measure of 'hot' impulsivity correlated with VS recruitment by post-response anticipation of low rewards and with VS recruitment by delivery of low rewards. These findings indicate that incentive-motivational processing of nondrug rewards is substantially maintained in recovering alcoholics, and that reward-elicited VS recruitment correlates more with individual differences in trait impulsivity irrespective of addiction. Hum Brain Mapp 33:2174-2188, 2012. Published 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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15. Psychosocial problems and recruitment of incentive neurocircuitry: Exploring individual differences in healthy adolescents.
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Bjork, James M., Smith, Ashley R., Chen, Gang, and Hommer, Daniel W.
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BRAIN ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,NEUROBIOLOGY ,NEURAL circuitry ,NERVOUS system - Abstract
Abstract: Maturational differences in brain responsiveness to rewards have been implicated in the increased rates of injury and death in adolescents from behavior-related causes. However, much of this morbidity is related to drug intoxication or other externalizing behaviors, and may be concentrated in a subset of adolescents who are at psychosocial or neurobiological risk. To examine whether individual differences in psychosocial and behavioral symptomatology relate to activation of motivational neurocircuitry, we scanned 26 psychiatrically healthy adolescents using fMRI as they performed a monetary incentive delay task. Overall Problem Density on the Drug Use Screening Inventory (DUSI-OPD) correlated positively with activation of ventral mesofrontal cortex (mFC) during anticipation of responding for rewards (vs responding for no incentive). In addition, DUSI-OPD correlated positively with right ventral striatum recruitment during anticipation of responding to win rewards (vs responding for no incentive or to avoid losses of identical magnitudes). Finally, a psychophysiological interaction (PPI) analysis indicated that increased connectivity between nucleus accumbens and portions of anterior cingulate and mFC as a function of reward prospects also correlated with DUSI-OPD. These findings extend previous reports demonstrating that in adolescents, individual differences in reactivity of motivational neurocircuitry relate to different facets of impulsivity or externalizing behaviors. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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16. Delay Discounting Correlates with Proportional Lateral Frontal Cortex Volumes
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Bjork, James M., Momenan, Reza, and Hommer, Daniel W.
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FRONTAL lobe , *DELAY of gratification , *BRAIN function localization , *REWARD (Psychology) , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging of the brain , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *DECISION making , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Background: Functional neuroimaging experiments in healthy control subjects have shown that choosing between small and immediate rewards versus larger but deferred rewards in delay discounting (DD) tasks recruits mesofrontal and lateral frontal cortex. Might individual differences in frontocortical gray matter morphology be related to preference for immediate reward? Methods: We related DD in a laboratory decision-making task to proportional frontocortical gray matter (GM) volumes calculated from segmented magnetic resonance images in 29 healthy adults. Results: Dorsolateral and inferolateral frontal cortex GM volumes (corrected as a proportion of whole cerebral brain volume) each correlated inversely with preference for immediate gratification during decision making, as indexed by DD constant k. Conversely, neither proportional orbitofrontal or mesofrontal cortex GM volume nor cerebral brain volume (CBV) or total intracranial volume (ICV; a measure of maximal brain growth) significantly correlated with severity of DD. Conclusions: Severity of discounting of delayed rewards correlates with proportional lateral frontocortical GM morphology but not with whole brain measures. In light of evidence of frontocortical abnormalities in substance dependence and sociopathy, future studies can assess whether reduced frontocortical volume itself is a morphological marker or risk factor for inability to delay gratification in psychiatric disorders. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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17. Striatal sensitivity to reward deliveries and omissions in substance dependent patients
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Bjork, James M., Smith, Ashley R., and Hommer, Daniel W.
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *NEURAL circuitry , *VISUAL cortex , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *BRAIN imaging , *CONTROLLED drinking , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Abstract: Some motivational theories of substance dependence (SD) posit either pathologically increased or decreased ventral striatum (VS) recruitment by cues for nondrug rewards. The incentive-sensitization hypothesis, alternatively, attributes SD to enhanced incentive salience of drug-predictive cues specifically, with no requirement for altered nondrug incentive processing. We assessed whether individuals undergoing inpatient therapy for SD are characterized by altered recruitment of mesolimbic incentive neurocircuitry by cues and deliveries of nondrug rewards. During functional magnetic resonance imaging, substance-dependent patients (SDP) and controls performed a modified monetary incentive delay task featuring: a) anticipatory cues that signaled opportunities to respond to a target to either win money or avoid losing money, b) notifications of wins and losses, and c) unexpected replacement of reward trial outcomes with a demand to repeat the trial. Both anticipatory reward cues and loss cues elicited similar mood responses and VS activation between SDP and controls. However, in SDP (but not controls), reward notifications also activated VS and mesial frontal cortex, and loss notifications activated anterior insula. Finally, substitution of expected outcomes in reward trials with notifications to repeat the trial deactivated the VS in SDP but not in controls. These data do not suggest that SD is characterized by altered recruitment of VS circuitry by cues for nondrug incentives. Rather, SDP may instead have increased limbic system sensitivity to reward and loss delivery, consistent with the role of impulsivity in SD. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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18. Incentive-elicited striatal activation in adolescent children of alcoholics.
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Bjork, James M., Knutson, Brian, and Hommer, Daniel W.
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *CHILDREN of people with alcoholism , *NUCLEUS accumbens , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *ALCOHOLISM , *MENTAL illness , *INDIVIDUAL differences - Abstract
Aims Deficient recruitment of motivational circuitry by non-drug rewards has been postulated as a pre-morbid risk factor for substance dependence (SD). We tested whether parental alcoholism, which confers risk of SD, is correlated with altered recruitment of ventral striatum (VS) by non-drug rewards in adolescence. Design During functional magnetic resonance imaging, adolescent children of alcoholics (COA; age 12–16 years) with no psychiatric disorders (including substance abuse) and similarly aged children with no risk factors responded to targets to win or avoid losing $0, $0.20, $1, $5 or a variable amount (ranging from $0.20 to $5). Results In general, brain activation by either reward anticipation or outcome notification did not differ between COA and age/gender-matched controls. Cue-elicited reward anticipation activated portions of VS in both COA and controls. In nucleus accumbens (NAcc), signal change increased with anticipated reward magnitude (with intermediate recruitment by variable incentives) but not with loss magnitudes. Reward deliveries activated the NAcc and mesofrontal cortex in both COA and controls. Losses activated anterior insula bilaterally in both groups, with more extensive right anterior insula activation by losses in controls. NAcc signal change during anticipation of maximum rewards (relative to non-reward) correlated positively with both Brief Sensation-Seeking Scale scores and with self-reported excitement in response to maximum reward cues (relative to cues for non-reward). Conclusions Among adolescents with no psychiatric disorders, incentive-elicited VS activation may relate more to individual differences in sensation-seeking personality than to presence of parental alcoholism alone. Future research could focus on adolescents with behavior disorders or additional risk factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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19. Impulsivity in abstinent alcohol-dependent patients: relation to control subjects and type 1–/type 2–like traits
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Bjork, James M., Hommer, Daniel W., Grant, Steven J., and Danube, Cinnamon
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ALCOHOLISM , *AGGRESSION (Psychology) , *MEMORY , *PSYCHOMETRICS - Abstract
Abstract: Extensive literature has linked behavior control problems in childhood to risk for alcoholism, but impulsivity in alcohol-dependent adults has not been well characterized. Using a variety of laboratory measures of impulsivity, we assessed whether detoxified alcohol-dependent patients [(ADP); n =130] were more impulsive than control subjects [(CS); n =41]. In comparison with CS, ADP demonstrated (1) increased rates of commission errors, but not omission errors, in a continuous performance test, (2) a more severe devaluation of delayed reward, (3) increased rates of risky responses in a new risk-taking paradigm, and (4) higher psychometric scores of impulsivity and aggression. Across all subjects, aggressiveness correlated significantly with severity of delay discounting. A post hoc analysis of data obtained for male ADP indicated that, in comparison with patients with late onset of problem drinking and no problem-drinking parent, those ADP with earlier age of problem drinking and who reported a problem-drinking father (type 2–like alcohol dependence) demonstrated faster response latencies and more responses to non-target stimuli (commission errors) in the continuous performance test, as well as higher psychometric aggression. In contrast, these subtypes of male ADP did not differ in delay discounting and risk taking. These findings collectively indicate that, in comparison with CS, ADP are more impulsive in several dimensions, with elevated impulsivity in a working memory task as well as aggressivity characteristic of alcohol-dependent men with type 2–like features. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
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20. Behavioral impulsivity paradigms: a comparison in hospitalized adolescents with disruptive behavior disorders.
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Dougherty, Donald M., Bjork, James M., Andrew Harper, R., Marsh, Dawn M., Gerard Moeller, F., Mathias, Charles W., and Swann, Alan C.
- Abstract
Background: Behavioral impulsivity paradigms vary widely and studies using these measures have typically relied on a single measure used in isolation. As a result, comparisons between measures are difficult, with little consensus regarding which method may be most sensitive to individual impulsivity differences of different populations. Method: A single testing session of each of four different impulsivity tasks was completed by two groups of adolescents aged 13-17: hospitalized inpatients with disruptive behavior disorders (DBD; n=22) and controls ( n=22). Tasks included two rapid-decision (IMT/DMT and GoStop) and two reward-directed (TC and SKIP) impulsivity paradigms. Behavioral testing took place within 3 days of hospitalization for the adolescents with DBD. Results: Compared to controls, the DBD group exhibited higher commission error rates, lower inhibited response rates after a stop-signal, and twice as many reward-directed responses even after IQ differences between the groups were taken into account. When the four paradigms were compared, effect-size calculations indicated that the two rapid-decision paradigms were more sensitive to group differences than the reward-directed tasks. Conclusions: Despite the initiation of pharmacotherapy within the first 3 days of hospitalization, in contrast to the control group, the adolescents with DBD performed consistently with what has been operationally defined as impulsivity. Based on these results, these tasks appear to measure similar, but unique components of the impulsivity construct. With further study, laboratory behavioral paradigms may prove to be useful additions to current clinical diagnostic and treatment procedures in a variety of psychiatric populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Two models of impulsivity: relationship to personality traits and psychopathology
- Author
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Swann, Alan C., Bjork, James M., Moeller, F. Gerard, and Dougherty, Donald M.
- Subjects
- *
IMPULSIVE personality , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Background: Impulsivity is prominent in psychiatric disorders. Two dominant models of impulsivity are the reward-discounting model, where impulsivity is defined as inability to wait for a larger reward, and the rapid-response model, where impulsivity is defined as responding without adequate assessment of context. We have compared the role of these models of impulsivity in human psychopathology, based on the hypothesis that rapid-response impulsivity would be more strongly related to other aspects of psychopathology and to impulsivity as described by questionnaires.Methods: We investigated relationships between personality and laboratory measures of impulsivity, and between these measures and clinical characteristics, in parents of adolescent subjects with disruptive behavioral disorders (DBDs) and matched control subjects. Diagnoses were rendered using the Structured Interview for DSM-IV. The Barratt Impulsiveness Scale (BIS) was used as a trait measure of impulsivity. Rapid-response impulsivity was assessed using a form of the Continuous Performance Test, the Immediate Memory-Delayed Memory Task (IMT/DMT). Reward-delay impulsivity was measured using two tasks where subjects could choose between smaller immediate or larger delayed rewards.Results: Rapid-response, but not reward-delay impulsivity, was significantly higher in subjects with lifetime Axis I or Axis II diagnoses. Scores on the BIS were elevated in subjects with Axis I diagnoses and correlated significantly with both rapid-response and reward-delay tests, but more strongly with the former. Multiple regression showed that rapid-response, but not reward-delay performance or intelligence quotient, contributed significantly to BIS scores. Correlations were similar in parents of control subjects and of DBD subjects.Conclusions: These data suggest that measures of rapid-response impulsivity and of reward-delay impulsivity are both related to impulsivity as a personality characteristic. The relationship appears stronger, however, for rapid-response impulsivity, as measured by the IMT/DMT. Laboratory and personality measures of impulsivity appear to be related to risk of psychopathology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Alcohol Increases Commission Error Rates for a Continuous Performance Test.
- Author
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Dougherty, Donald M., Moeller, F. Gerard, Steinberg, Joel L., Marsh, Dawn M., Hines, Stella E., and Bjork, James M.
- Abstract
Background: Studying the effects of alcohol on Continuous Performance Test (CPT) performance was of interest for two reasons, i.e., (1) perhaps because of the ease of the task used in previous experiments, alcohol has not been found to impair performance, and (2) CPT commission errors (described below) have been related to impulsive behavior. Methods: In this study, the CPT featured both an Immediate Memory Task (IMT) and a more difficult Delayed Memory Task (DMT). We compared the performance of 18 subjects under both alcohol and placebo conditions, using a within-subject design. Both the IMT (0.5-sec delay) and the DMT (3.5-sec delay, with distracter stimuli at 0.5-sec intervals) required the subject to respond if a briefly displayed number was identical to the one presented before it. Stimuli included target (identical match), catch (4 of 5 digits matched), and novel (random number) stimuli. On 2 separate days, subjects performed between administrations of three hourly placebo drinks or three hourly drinks containing 0.20 g/kg of alcohol (producing peak breath alcohol concentrations of approximately 0.035%). Results: The main finding was that alcohol consumption increased responses to catch stimuli (i.e., commission errors) in the DMT. In contrast, performance in the IMT (the easier task) was unaffected by alcohol. Commission errors measured during peak breath alcohol concentrations were significantly correlated with scores on the Barratt Impulsivity Scale for both the IMT and DMT. Discriminability ( A') between target and catch stimuli was reduced by alcohol for the DMT only. Conclusions: These data indicate that even small amounts of alcohol can produce measurable changes in CPT performance parameters if the task is of sufficient difficulty and that commission errors can be increased by alcohol consumption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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