4.1 Article

Low-level alcohol consumption during adolescence and its impact on cognitive control development

Journal

ADDICTION BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages 313-326

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/adb.12467

Keywords

adolescents; low-level alcohol use; cognitive control

Funding

  1. German Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01EV0711, 01EE1406B]
  2. European Union [LSHM-CT-2007-037286]
  3. Medical Research Council Programme Grant 'Developmental pathways into adolescent substance abuse' (MRC) [93558]
  4. German Research Foundation (DFG) [SFB 940/1, SFB 940/2]
  5. Max Kade Foundation, NY, USA

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Adolescence is a critical period for maturation of cognitive control and most adolescents start experimenting with alcohol around that time. On the one hand, recent studies indicate that low control abilities predict future problematic alcohol use. On the other hand, binge drinking during young adulthood can (further) impair cognitive control. However, so far no study examined the effects of low-level alcohol use during adolescence. In the present longitudinal fMRI study, we therefore investigated the development of cognitive control in a community-based sample of 92 adolescents at ages 14, 16 and 18. Two different cognitive control functions, i.e. inhibition of pre-potent responses (operationalized by incongruence effects) and switching between different task sets, were measured within one task. Alcohol use in our sample was low (mean: 54 g/week at age 18). The study revealed that neither behavioural nor neural measures of cognitive control function at age 14 predicted alcohol use at age 18 but confirmed established predictors such as gender and personality. As expected, from age 14 to 18, cognitive control abilities were improving (decreased reaction times and/or errors), and activation of cognitive control networks (dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and pre-supplementary motor area) during incongruent trials increased. Unexpectedly, higher alcohol consumption during adolescence was associated with a more pronounced increase in cognitive performance and a smaller increase of neural activation when incongruent trials afforded inhibitory control. We conclude that low-level alcohol use during adolescence does not severely impair ongoing maturation of cognitive control abilities and networks.

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