Abstract

Cognitive impairment characterized by high impulsivity and risk-taking has been correlated with substance-related disorders. However, it is unclear if the decision-making process is well known upon consideration of factors such as uncertainty environments, risk, and time manipulation in different decision-making procedures. The main objective of this study was to identify behavioral differences between substance abusers and healthy control participants in a behavioral test battery, including (1) two uncertainty decision-making tasks, the Balloon Analog Risk Task (BART) and the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT, trial 1–40); (2) three risk-taking tasks, the Columbia Card Task Hot version (CCT-hot), Columbia Card Task Cold version (CCT-cold), and the IGT (trial 41–100); and (3) an impulsivity task, the Delay Discounting task (DD). The second objective looked at how the six behavioral tests correlate. We worked with a sample of 54 adult participants (Substance abusers: n = 28; Healthy controls: n = 26). An anonymous survey website was created to execute all the cognitive tasks. The results showed no statistically significant differences between the groups in any of the tasks. However, the results showed an upward trend of impulsive (i.e., steeply discounting curve) and risk-taking behaviors (i.e., a low learning curve in IGT) in substance abuse participants. The factor analysis results showed four different main factors: (1) risk-taking task in the IGT (trial 40–100), (2) uncertainty task in BART, (3) impulsivity in DD, IGT (trial 1–40), and (4) deliberate process in the Columbia card task (cold and hot). We conclude that factors such as the uncertainty tasks in the BART and the first block of IGT trials, the risk cues in the CCT tasks (i.e., number of loss, number of gains, and loss cards), and the time to delivery in the DD task, can affect the complex decision-making process in both clinical and healthy groups.

Highlights

  • Several studies have found mental health complications, including cognitive functioning by substance use disorders (SUDs)

  • When evaluating the most common type of drug used by the substance abuse group, the results showed two subgroups, polysubstance abusers (70%) and mono-drug abusers (30%)

  • The results calculated revealed in the first decision rule: scores ≥0.525 in the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) Block 1 are related to healthy controls (GI = 0.062), and the scores

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Several studies have found mental health complications, including cognitive functioning by substance use disorders (SUDs). Recent studies have demonstrated that substance abusers who are in treatment (alcohol, cocaine, heroin, tobacco, and methamphetamine) exhibit extreme values of choosing small immediate rewards over large delay rewards (i.e., steeply delay discounting) [3,4,5], and risk-taking behaviors [6,7,8]. It remains unclear whether risk-taking behaviors are associated with impulsivity (i.e., steeply delay discounting). Abstinence time seems like an important variable to consider besides the kind of task to measure risktaking to contrast substance abusers and healthy controls

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call