Emotional bias modification weakens game-related compulsivity and reshapes frontostriatal pathways

Author:

Wu Lulu1,Xu Jiahua23,Song Kunru1,Zhu Lei1,Zhou Nan4,Xu Linxuan1,Liu Guanqun1,Wang Ziliang1,Wang Rui1,Qin Shaozheng1ORCID,Fang Xiaoyi5,Zhang Jintao1ORCID,Potenza Marc N67891011

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning and IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Beijing Normal University , Beijing , China

2. Chinese Institute for Brain Research , Beijing , China

3. Max Planck University College London Centre for Computational Psychiatry and Ageing Research, University College London , London , UK

4. Faculty of Education, Beijing Normal University , Beijing , China

5. Institute of Developmental Psychology, Beijing Normal University , Beijing , China

6. Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine , New Haven, CT 06510 , USA

7. Connecticut Mental Health Center , New Haven, CT 06519 , USA

8. CT Council on Problem Gambling , Wethersfield, CT 06109 , USA

9. Child Study Center, Yale University School of Medicine , New Haven, CT 06511 , USA

10. Department of Neuroscience, Yale University School of Medicine , New Haven, CT 06511 , USA

11. Wu Tsai Institute, Yale University , New Haven, CT 06510 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Addiction is characterized by compulsive engagement despite adverse consequences. Psychobehavioural interventions targeting compulsivity in addictions are relatively rare, particularly for behavioural addictions like internet gaming disorder (IGD). Free from confounding drug-on-brain effects, IGD provides a promising model for understanding neuropsychological processes of addictions. IGD is a global concern in the setting of increasing internet use worldwide. Thus, developing interventions and understanding their mechanisms of action are important. Positive emotional association biases (EABs) towards addiction cues based on reward conditioning may underlie addiction-associated compulsivity. Here, we developed an EAB modification (EABM) protocol and examined whether modifying EABs via cognitive training would alter neurocognitive aspects of addiction-associated compulsivity in IGD. We recruited 90 IGD participants who were randomly assigned to receive EABM or sham training in a 1:1 ratio (clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT04068064). The EABM intervention involved six consecutive days of exposure to negative emotional terms linked to gaming stimuli and positive terms linked to non-gaming healthy-alternative stimuli. The sham training involved similar stimuli linked to neutral words. Participants underwent event-related functional MRI while performing a regulation-of-craving task and received several behavioural assessments pretraining and post-training. Primary efficacy measures were changes in gaming-related positive EABs, and compulsive gaming thoughts and behaviours. Behaviourally, EABM (versus sham) training decreased gaming-related positive EABs and compulsive gaming thoughts and behaviours. Neurally, EABM training involved decreased activation in the bilateral dorsal striatum in the regulation-of-craving task and altered left dorsal striatum-centric functional connectivity with ventral prefrontal cortical regions, which correlated with decreases in gaming-related EABs or compulsive gaming thoughts and behaviours. EABM training also implicated activation changes in the right medial frontal gyrus and posterior insula. EABM may reduce compulsive gaming thoughts and behaviours via reshaping functional organization of frontostriatal pathways and insular activity in IGD. The therapeutic potential of EABM should be examined in larger, longer-term studies, as should its application to other addictive disorders.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning

Connecticut Council on Problem Gambling

Mohegan Sun Casino

National Center for Responsible Gaming

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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