Abstract

Increased motivation towards alcohol use and suboptimal behavioral control are suggested to predispose adolescents to alcohol use disorders (AUDs). Paradoxically however, most adolescent AUDs resolve over time without any formal intervention, suggesting adolescent resilience to AUDs. Importantly, studies directly comparing adolescent and adult alcohol use are largely missing. We therefore aimed to unravel the moderating role of age in the relation between alcohol use and motivational and control-related cognitive processes in 45 adolescent drinkers compared to 45 adults. We found that enhancement drinking motives and impulsivity related positively to alcohol use. Although enhancement drinking motives and impulsivity were higher in adolescents, the strength of the relation between these measures and alcohol use did not differ between age groups. None of the alcohol use-related motivational measures (i.e., craving, attentional bias, and approach bias) and behavioral control measures (i.e., interference control, risky decision making, and working-memory) were associated with alcohol use or differed between age groups. These findings support the role of impulsivity and affective sensitivity in adolescent drinking but question the moderating role of age therein. The current study contributes towards understanding the role of age in the relation between alcohol use and cognition.

Highlights

  • Adolescence is marked by increases in experimentation and risk taking, positively stimulating exploration, social development, and growth towards independence [1]

  • The current study aimed to investigate the relation between motivation- and control-related cognitive functions and alcohol use in adolescents compared to adults

  • Normative reward, emotion, and social sensitivity during adolescence [11] may result in strengthened motivational drives like craving, attentional bias and approach action tendencies in response to alcohol and alcohol cues in adolescents compared to adults

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Summary

Introduction

Adolescence is marked by increases in experimentation and risk taking, positively stimulating exploration, social development, and growth towards independence [1]. Due to this very same experimentation and exploration, adolescents can make potentially unhealthy choices, including those related to alcohol use. Since most studies into AUDs in adolescents focus on this age group only, little is known about the potentially moderating role of age in the relation between. NeuroSci 2020, 1 alcohol use and cognition. The current study aimed to investigate the relation between motivation- and control-related cognitive functions and alcohol use in adolescents compared to adults

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