| Literature DB >> 24137138 |
Damien Brevers1, Antoine Bechara, Axel Cleeremans, Xavier Noël.
Abstract
The Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) involves probabilistic learning via monetary rewards and punishments, where advantageous task performance requires subjects to forego potential large immediate rewards for small longer-term rewards to avoid larger losses. Pathological gamblers (PG) perform worse on the IGT compared to controls, relating to their persistent preference toward high, immediate, and uncertain rewards despite experiencing larger losses. In this contribution, we review studies that investigated processes associated with poor IGT performance in PG. Findings from these studies seem to fit with recent neurocognitive models of addiction, which argue that the diminished ability of addicted individuals to ponder short-term against long-term consequences of a choice may be the product of an hyperactive automatic attentional and memory system for signaling the presence of addiction-related cues (e.g., high uncertain rewards associated with disadvantageous decks selection during the IGT) and for attributing to such cues pleasure and excitement. This incentive-salience associated with gambling-related choice in PG may be so high that it could literally "hijack" resources ["hot" executive functions (EFs)] involved in emotional self-regulation and necessary to allow the enactment of further elaborate decontextualized problem-solving abilities ("cool" EFs). A framework for future research is also proposed, which highlights the need for studies examining how these processes contribute specifically to the aberrant choice profile displayed by PG on the IGT.Entities:
Keywords: Iowa Gambling Task; decision-making; dual-process model; gambling disorder; willpower
Year: 2013 PMID: 24137138 PMCID: PMC3786255 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00665
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Studies using the IGT in gambling disorder.
| Brevers et al., | PrG ranging from low | DSM diagnose | IGT | IGT, CPT, Cups task, CFT, OSPAN: PrG < HC |
| PrG to severe PG | 7.07 (3.74) | Card Playing Task (CPT) | ||
| PG = 65, 50 male | Cups task | Problem gambling severity correlates with performance on the IGT and the CPT | ||
| HC = 35, 29 male | Coin Flipping Task | |||
| Operation span working memory task (OSPAN) | In HC: correlation between later stages of IGT and OSPAN | |||
| In PG: no correlation between later stages of IGT and OSPAN | ||||
| Brevers et al., | PG = 30, 29 male | DSM diagnose | IGT with post-decision wagering | IGT: PG < HC |
| HC = 35, 27 male | PG whereas HC | |||
| HC maximized their wagers on advantageous decks and minimized their wagers on disadvantageous decks PG maximized their wagers independently of selecting advantageous decks | ||||
| Cavedini et al., | PG = 20, 19 male | DSM diagnose | IGT | IGT: PG < HC |
| HC = 40, 28 male | 15.8 (3.6) | Weigl's Sorting Test (WST) | WST: PG = HC | |
| Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) | WCST: PG = HC | |||
| De Wilde et al., | PG = 21, 20 male | DSM diagnose | IGT | IGT, DDT, Stroop: PG = HC |
| HC = 31, 27 male | 11.14 (4.12) | Delay Discounting Task (DDT) Stroop with gambling words | Stroop: PG < HC | |
| Forbush et al., | PG = 25, 14 male | DSM diagnosis | IGT | Stroop, WAIS, WCST, COWAT and BDAEANT: PG < HC |
| HC = 34, 9 male | WAIS letter and numbers and picture | Stroop IGT: PG < HC | ||
| Controlled Oral Word Association Test (COWAT) | Trail Making Task A and B: PG = HC | |||
| WCST-64 | ||||
| Boston diagnostic aphasia exam animal naming test (BDAEANT) Trail Making Task A and B | ||||
| Goudriaan et al., | PG = 48, 41 male | DSM diagnose | IGT | IGT: PG < HC; PG = AD |
| AD = 46, 36 male | 13.9 (6.3) | Computerized card playing task | IGT perseveration: PG < HC | |
| TS = 47, 32 male | GO/NO-GO task with reward and loss version | Commission errors GO/NO-GO: PG > HC | ||
| Goudriaan et al., | PG = 46, 39 male | DSM diagnose | IGT with skin conductance | IGT: PG < HC |
| HC = 47, 36 male | 14.4 (6.1) | response (SCR) and heart rate | HR decrease before choosing bad deck in HC < PG | |
| (HR) reactivity | SCR reaction to disadvantageous decks HC > PG | |||
| HR decreases with loss and increases in wins in HC HR decreases for both wins and losses in PG | ||||
| Kertzman et al., | PG = 51, 35 male | DSM diagnose | IGT | IGT: PG < HC |
| HC = 57, 36 male | 14.4 (6.1) | Stroop task | Stroop task, Go/NoGo: PG < HC | |
| Go/NoGo task | No association between Stroop + Go/NoGO and IGT performance | |||
| Lakey et al., | HC = 57, 48 male | DIGS | IGT | Overconfidence and bed acceptance on the GGT and disadvantageous choices on Problem gambling severity correlates with performance on the IGT |
| PrG = 85, 63 male | 0–2 | GGT (overconfidence measures) | ||
| PG = 79, 55 male | 3–4 | |||
| >5 | ||||
| Ledgerwood et al., | PG = 45, 21 male | NODS lifetime | IGT | IGT: PG < HC |
| HC = 45, 23 male | 8.0 (1.7) | Tower of London | Tower of London: PG < HC | |
| NODS past year | GoStop response inhibition task | GoStop, Stroop; COWAT, WCST: PG = HC | ||
| 7.5 (1.8) | Stroop test | |||
| COWAT | ||||
| WCST | ||||
| Linnet et al., | PG = 61, 54 male | 8.93 (1.86) | IGT ( | IGT: PG < HC |
| HC = 39, 11 male | Switching behavior after negative feedback: PG < HC | |||
| Linnet et al., | PG = 16, all male | DSM diagnose | IGT (ABCD, KLMN and QRST versions) with PET using [11C]raclopride to measure dopamine release in the ventral striatum | PG who lost money (net IGT outcome) significantly increased dopamine release in the left ventral striatum compared with HC |
| HC = 15, all male | 13.12 (2.06) | PG and HC who won money did not differ in dopamine release | ||
| Linnet et al., | PG = 16, all male | DSM diagnose | IGT (ABCD, KLMN and QRST versions) with PET using [11C]raclopride to measure dopamine release in the ventral striatum | IGT: PG = HC |
| HC = 14, all male | 13.19 (2.11) | Dopamine release was associated with higher IGT performance in HC and significantly lower IGT performance PG | ||
| Linnet et al., | PG = 18, all male | DSM diagnose | IGT (ABCD, KLMN and QRST versions) with PET using [11C]raclopride to measure dopamine release in the ventral striatum | PG with dopamine release in the ventral striatum had significantly higher excitement levels than HC despite lower IGT performance |
| HC = 16, all male | No differences in excitement levels and IGT performance were found between PG and HC without dopamine release PG showed a significant correlation between dopamine release and excitement level, while no such interaction was found in HC | |||
| Linnet et al., | PG = 18, all male | DSM diagnose | IGT with PET using [11C]raclopride to measure dopamine release in the ventral striatum | High dopamine release in PG in which the probability of selecting advantageous decks is maximally uncertain (ratio advantageous decisions/total decisions = 0.05) |
| HC = 16, all male | ||||
| Oberg et al., | PG = 15, all male | NODS | IGT modified version with EEG | IGT: PG < HC |
| HC = 13, all male | 2.8 | HC < PG MedioFrontal Negativity, 185 ms post-disadvantageous deck outcome | ||
| CPGI | PG < HC P300 Theta Amplitude, 300 ms post-disadvantageous deck outcome | |||
| 5.4 | ||||
| Peterson et al., | PG = 11, all male | DSM diagnose | IGT (ABCD, KLMN and QRST versions) with SCR reactivity and PET using [11C]raclopride to measure dopamine release | Active IGT gambling minus passive IGT gambling: HC < PG in SCR |
| HC = 11, all male | In both PG and HC, highly sensation-seeking subjects had significant increase of receptor availability in striatum, compared to normally sensation-seeking subjects | |||
| Petry, | SD = 63, all male | DSM diagnose | IGT | PG + SD < SD < HC |
| PG + SD = 27, all male | 9.3 (2.8) | |||
| HC = 21, all male | ||||
| Power et al., | PG = 13, all male | DSM diagnose | IGT with fMRI | IGT: PG < HC |
| HC = 13, all male | 13.00 (4.00) | Bad deck minus bad decks: HC < PG in the orbitofrontal cortex, caudate nucleus and the amygdala | ||
| Roca et al., | PG = 11 | DSM diagnose | IGT | IGT: HC > PG |
| HC = 11 | GO/NO-GO | GO/NO-GO: HC < PG | ||
| Unknown ratio | Addenbrooke's cognitive examination; short screen for general cognitive functions | General cognitive functions; word fluency and memory: HC > PG | ||
| male/female | In PG: no association between IGT and other cognitive task | |||
| Tanabe et al., | SD = 14, 10 male | 10.7 (4.4) | IGT modified version with fMRI | IGT: SD = SD + PG = HC |
| SD + PG = 14, 12 male | 0.2 (0.4) | Decision making minus control condition: OFC, ventral medial dorsal, ventrolateral/anterior insula, ACC, ventral striatum, parietal en occipital lobes in all groups | ||
| SD = SD + PG < HC in ventral medial prefrontal cortex activity SD < SD + PG = HC in right anterior prefrontal cortex activity |
These studies were selected in the basis of a comprehensive literature search conducted in PUBMED and PsychINFO with key search terms, including: Iowa gambling task, IGT, decision making, uncertain*, ambig* in combination with the key word gambl*. Cross-references were searched in the selected articles. A total of 1387 hits were retrieved in PUBMED and PsychINFO using the search terms. Selection criteria for studies were inclusion of the original or adapted version of the IGT, presence of a gamblers group (ranging from frequent to severe pathological gamblers). After this selection, 28 papers remained, 7 articles were excluded because no control group was included in the study (n = 1) or it concerned review articles (n = 6). SOGS, South Oaks Gambling Screen; HC, healthy controls; PG, pathological gamblers; PrG, problem gambler; SD, substance dependent.
Figure 1(A) A framework for advantageous deck selection in healthy controls. Pathway (a): Impulsive motivational processes directed at options featuring short-term salient rewards. Pathway (b): The moderation of impulsive processes by “hot” reflective processes involved in the reduction of impulsive-incentive reactions and in the ability to anticipate the potential outcomes of a given decision on an emotional basis. Pathway (c): The ability to control emotional reactions and inhibit basic behavioral impulses by “hot” executive/reflective functions allows rational and cognitive determinations of risks and benefits associated with options (only during the last trials of the IGT, that is, when participants have experienced the different winl/loss contingencies enough and become aware of which decks are more at risk than others), which further reinforce the efficiency of reward anticipation processes (e.g., to weigh short-term gains against long-term losses on both emotional and rational bases). Pathway (d): Adequate sensitivity to loss and reward and accurate assessment of the quality of the decision, which would bias advantageously forthcoming deck selections. (B) A framework for disadvantageous deck selection in pathological gamblers. Pathway (a): Hyperactive impulsive motivational processes directed at options featuring high, short-term rewards (as evidenced with attentional bias and implicit association toward gambling-related cues in PG; see Hyperactivity of impulsive processes toward gambling-related cues in PG). These impulsive processes could possibly interfere with or “hijack” the top-down “hot” reflective mechanisms necessary for triggering alarming signals about futures outcomes (as evidenced by fMRI studies which showed that, during disadvantageous lGT choice or during gambling·-related choice, PG exhibit increased activation in brain regions encompassing both impulsive-amygdala, ventral striatum, caudate nucleus, medial pulvinar nucleus - and “hot” reflective·- orbitofrontal cortex - processes; see Hyperactive impulsive processes and impaired IGT performance in PG). As a result, disadvantageous deck options may be flagged as salient and preferred to advantageous decks. Pathway (b): The “hijack” by impulsive incentive processes of the “hot” reflective resources would hamper further elaborated decontextualized problem-solving abilities (suggested by the absence of correlation between PGs' impairments in “cool” executive functioning and their lowered IGT performances, at either the early or the latter stages of IGT; see Hyperactive impulsive processes and impaired IGT performance in PG). Pathway (c): Hyposensitivity to loss and reward in PG (as evidenced by fMRI studies which observed a diminished ventral striatal response in PG after receiving monetary rewards and losses; see Gambling disorder and post-decision appraisals during the IGT) and failure at correctly assessing the quality of their already poor decision (evidenced by studies which observed a dissociation between PGs' subjective assessment of performance and objective performance; see Gambling disorder and post-decision appraisals during the IGT). As a result, PG might fail at properly integrate the outcomes of their actions over time, which could lead them to persist in taking high-risk choices, despite suffering large losses.