Literature DB >> 34889178

Regular recreational Cannabis users exhibit altered neural oscillatory dynamics during attention reorientation.

Seth D Springer1,2, Rachel K Spooner1,2, Mikki Schantell1,2, Yasra Arif1,2, Michaela R Frenzel1,2, Jacob A Eastman1,2, Tony W Wilson1,2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cannabis is the most widely used illicit drug in the United States and is often associated with changes in attention function, which may ultimately impact numerous other cognitive faculties (e.g. memory, executive function). Importantly, despite the increasing rates of cannabis use and widespread legalization in the United States, the neural mechanisms underlying attentional dysfunction in chronic users are poorly understood.
METHODS: We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) and a modified Posner cueing task in 21 regular cannabis users and 32 demographically matched non-user controls. MEG data were imaged in the time-frequency domain using a beamformer and peak voxel time series were extracted to quantify the oscillatory dynamics underlying use-related aberrations in attentional reorienting, as well as the impact on spontaneous neural activity immediately preceding stimulus onset.
RESULTS: Behavioral performance on the task (e.g. reaction time) was similar between regular cannabis users and non-user controls. However, the neural data indicated robust theta-band synchronizations across a distributed network during attentional reorienting, with activity in the bilateral inferior frontal gyri being markedly stronger in users relative to controls (p's < 0.036). Additionally, we observed significantly reduced spontaneous theta activity across this distributed network during the pre-stimulus baseline in cannabis users relative to controls (p's < 0.020).
CONCLUSIONS: Despite similar performance on the task, we observed specific alterations in the neural dynamics serving attentional reorienting in regular cannabis users compared to controls. These data suggest that regular cannabis users may employ compensatory processing in the prefrontal cortices to efficiently reorient their attention relative to non-user controls.

Entities:  

Keywords:  MEG; magnetoencephalography; posner; spontaneous activity; theta

Year:  2021        PMID: 34889178      PMCID: PMC9250753          DOI: 10.1017/S0033291721002671

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Med        ISSN: 0033-2917            Impact factor:   10.592


  77 in total

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9.  Prefrontal theta modulates sensorimotor gamma networks during the reorienting of attention.

Authors:  Rachel K Spooner; Alex I Wiesman; Amy L Proskovec; Elizabeth Heinrichs-Graham; Tony W Wilson
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Authors:  Yasra Arif; Alex I Wiesman; Jennifer O'Neill; Christine Embury; Pamela E May; Brandon J Lew; Mikki D Schantell; Howard S Fox; Susan Swindells; Tony W Wilson
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