| Literature DB >> 26948669 |
Scott J Moeller1, Stephen M Fleming2, Gabriela Gan1, Anna Zilverstand1, Pias Malaker1, Federico d'Oleire Uquillas1, Kristin E Schneider1, Rebecca N Preston-Campbell1, Muhammad A Parvaz1, Thomas Maloney1, Nelly Alia-Klein1, Rita Z Goldstein1.
Abstract
Dysfunctional self-awareness has been posited as a key feature of drug addiction, contributing to compromised control over addictive behaviors. In the present investigation, we showed that, compared with healthy controls (n=13) and even individuals with remitted cocaine use disorder (n=14), individuals with active cocaine use disorder (n=8) exhibited deficits in basic metacognition, defined as a weaker link between objective performance and self-reported confidence of performance on a visuo-perceptual accuracy task. This metacognitive deficit was accompanied by gray matter volume decreases, also most pronounced in individuals with active cocaine use disorder, in the rostral anterior cingulate cortex, a region necessary for this function in health. Our results thus provide a direct unbiased measurement - not relying on long-term memory or multifaceted choice behavior - of metacognition deficits in drug addiction, which are further mapped onto structural deficits in a brain region that subserves metacognitive accuracy in health and self-awareness in drug addiction. Impairments of metacognition could provide a basic mechanism underlying the higher-order self-awareness deficits in addiction, particularly among recent, active users.Entities:
Keywords: Anterior cingulate cortex; Drug addiction; Magnetic resonance imaging; Metacognition; Self-awareness; Voxel-based morphometry
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26948669 PMCID: PMC4805109 DOI: 10.1016/j.euroneuro.2016.02.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Neuropsychopharmacol ISSN: 0924-977X Impact factor: 4.600