1. Early childhood temperament predicts substance use in young adults.
- Author
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Lahat, A, Pérez-Edgar, K, Degnan, KA, Guyer, AE, Lejuez, CW, Ernst, M, Pine, DS, and Fox, NA
- Subjects
Ear ,Brain ,Humans ,Ear Diseases ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Risk Factors ,Cohort Studies ,Longitudinal Studies ,Follow-Up Studies ,Reproducibility of Results ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Adolescent Behavior ,Child Behavior ,Inhibition (Psychology) ,Motivation ,Temperament ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Infant ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,Inhibition ,Psychological ,behavioral inhibition ,longitudinal ,striatal function ,substance use ,temperament ,Preschool ,Inhibition ,Psychological ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology - Abstract
Behavioral inhibition (BI) is an important early childhood marker of risk for later psychiatric problems. The current 20-year prospective, longitudinal study focused on individual differences in this early temperament and adolescent brain function. As adolescents, 83 participants initially identified in infancy with the temperament of BI were assessed using functional imaging to examine striatal responses to incentives. Five years later, as young adults, these participants provided self-report of their substance use. Our findings show that children's early temperament interacts with their striatal sensitivity to incentives in adolescence to predict their level of substance use in young adulthood. Those young adults who, as children, showed the highest levels of BI reported the greatest substance use if, as adolescents, they also exhibited striatal hypersensitivity to incentives. These longitudinal data delineate one developmental pathway involving early biology and brain mechanisms for substance use in young adulthood.
- Published
- 2012