Developmental Changes in Habenular and Striatal Social Reinforcement Responsivity Across Adolescence Linked With Substance Use Article

Flannery, JS, Jorgensen, NA, Kwon, SJ et al. (2023). Developmental Changes in Habenular and Striatal Social Reinforcement Responsivity Across Adolescence Linked With Substance Use . BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 94(11), 888-897. 10.1016/j.biopsych.2023.04.018

cited authors

  • Flannery, JS; Jorgensen, NA; Kwon, SJ; Prinstein, MJ; Telzer, EH; Lindquist, KA

abstract

  • Background: Habenula (HB) function is implicated in substance use disorders and is involved in inhibiting dopamine release in the ventral striatum (VS). While blunted VS reward responsivity is implicated in risk for later substance use, links between HB reinforcement processing and progression of use have not, to our knowledge, been examined among adolescents. In the present study, we longitudinally assessed HB and VS responsivity to social rewards and punishments across adolescence and examined associations with substance use. Methods: Within a longitudinal design, 170 adolescents (53.5% female) completed 1 to 3 functional magnetic resonance imaging scans across 6th to 9th grade and reported yearly substance use across 6th to 11th grade. We examined VS and HB responsivity to social reinforcement during a social incentive delay task in which adolescents received social rewards (smiling faces) and punishments (scowling faces). Results: We observed increased VS responsivity to social rewards (vs. reward omissions) and increased VS, but decreased HB, responsivity to social punishment avoidance versus receipt. However, contrary to hypotheses, the HB displayed increased responsivity to social rewards (vs. reward omissions). Further, adolescents reporting regular substance use displayed longitudinally declining HB responsivity to social rewards (vs. reward omissions), whereas adolescents reporting no substance use displayed longitudinally increasing HB responsivity. In contrast, whereas VS responsivity to punishment avoidance versus receipt increased longitudinally among regular substance users, it stayed relatively stable among nonusers. Conclusions: These results suggest that differential HB and VS social reinforcement processing trajectories across adolescence are associated with substance use.

publication date

  • December 1, 2023

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 888

end page

  • 897

volume

  • 94

issue

  • 11