Literature DB >> 28294136

Opioid Modulation of Value-Based Decision-Making in Healthy Humans.

Marie Eikemo1,2,3, Guido Biele1,4, Frode Willoch5, Lotte Thomsen1, Siri Leknes1,6.   

Abstract

Modifying behavior to maximize reward is integral to adaptive decision-making. In rodents, the μ-opioid receptor (MOR) system encodes motivation and preference for high-value rewards. Yet it remains unclear whether and how human MORs contribute to value-based decision-making. We reasoned that if the human MOR system modulates value-based choice, this would be reflected by opposite effects of agonist and antagonist drugs. In a double-blind pharmacological cross-over study, 30 healthy men received morphine (10 mg), placebo, and the opioid antagonist naltrexone (50 mg). They completed a two-alternative decision-making task known to induce a considerable bias towards the most frequently rewarded response option. To quantify MOR involvement in this bias, we fitted accuracy and reaction time data with the drift-diffusion model (DDM) of decision-making. The DDM analysis revealed the expected bidirectional drug effects for two decision subprocesses. MOR stimulation with morphine increased the preference for the stimulus with high-reward probability (shift in starting point). Compared to placebo, morphine also increased, and naltrexone reduced, the efficiency of evidence accumulation. Since neither drug affected motor-coordination, speed-accuracy trade-off, or subjective state (indeed participants were still blinded after the third session), we interpret the MOR effects on evidence accumulation efficiency as a consequence of changes in effort exerted in the task. Together, these findings support a role for the human MOR system in value-based choice by tuning decision-making towards high-value rewards across stimulus domains.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28294136      PMCID: PMC5520785          DOI: 10.1038/npp.2017.58

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology        ISSN: 0893-133X            Impact factor:   7.853


  48 in total

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4.  Opioid-Independent and Opioid-Mediated Modes of Pain Modulation.

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5.  Effects of opioid receptor stimulation and blockade on touch pleasantness: a double-blind randomised trial.

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6.  Opioid-blunted cortisol response to stress is associated with increased negative mood and wanting of social reward.

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