4.7 Review

Individual differences in the attribution of incentive salience to reward-related cues: Implications for addiction

Journal

NEUROPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue -, Pages 139-148

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2008.06.027

Keywords

Addiction; Autoshaping; Goal tracking; Incentive salience; Pavlovian conditioning; Sign-tracking

Funding

  1. NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON DRUG ABUSE [R37DA004294, R01DA013386, P01DA021633] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  2. NIDA NIH HHS [5P01DA021633-02, P01 DA021633-02, R37 DA04294, R01 DA012286, R37 DA004294, R01 DA013386, P01 DA021633, R01 DA013386-01A2, R37 DA004294-15] Funding Source: Medline

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Drugs of abuse acquire different degrees of control over thoughts and actions based not only on the effects of drugs themselves, but also on predispositions of the individual. Those individuals who become addicted are unable to shift their thoughts and actions away from drugs and drug-associated stimuli. Thus in addicts, exposure to places or things (cues) that has been previously associated with drug-taking often instigates renewed drug-taking. We and others have postulated that drug-associated cues acquire the ability to maintain and instigate drug-taking behavior in part because they acquire incentive motivational Properties through Pavlovian (stimulus-stimulus) learning. In the case of compulsive behavioral disorders, including addiction, such cues may be attributed with pathological incentive value (incentive salience). For this reason, we have recently begun to explore individual differences in the tendency to attribute incentive salience to Cues that predict rewards. When discrete cues are associated with the non-contingent delivery of food or drug rewards some animals come to quickly approach and engage the Cue even if it is located at a distance from where the reward will be delivered. In these animals the reward-predictive Cue itself becomes attractive, eliciting approach towards it, presumably because it is attributed with incentive salience. Animals that develop this type of conditional response are called sign-trackers. Other animals, goal-trackers, do not approach the reward-predictive Cue, but upon cue presentation they immediately go to the location where food will be delivered (the goal). For goal-trackers the reward-predictive cue is not attractive, presumably because it is not attributed with incentive salience. We review here preliminary data Suggesting that these individual differences in the tendency to attribute incentive salience to cues predictive of reward may confer Vulnerability or resistance to compulsive behavioral disorders, including addiction. It will be important, therefore, to study how environmental, neurobiological and genetic interactions determine the extent to which individuals attribute incentive value to reward-predictive stimuli. (c) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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