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Reward-related attentional capture and cognitive inflexibility interact to determine greater severity of compulsivity-related problems

Reward-related attentional capture and cognitive inflexibility interact to determine greater severity of compulsivity-related problems
Reward-related attentional capture and cognitive inflexibility interact to determine greater severity of compulsivity-related problems

Background and objectives: Neurocognitive processes are key drivers of addictive and compulsive disorders. The current study examined whether reward-related attentional capture and cognitive inflexibility are associated with impulsive and/or compulsive personality traits, and whether these cognitive characteristics interact to predict greater compulsivity-related problems across obsessive-compulsive and drinking behaviors. Methods: One-hundred and seventy-three participants (mean age = 34.5 years, S.D = 8.4, 42% female) completed an online visual search task to measure reward-related attentional capture and its persistence following reversal of stimulus-reward contingencies. Participants also completed questionnaires to assess trait impulsivity, compulsivity, alcohol use, and obsessive-compulsive behaviors. Results: Greater reward-related attentional capture was associated with trait compulsivity, over and above all impulsivity dimensions, while greater cognitive inflexibility was associated with higher negative urgency (distress-elicited impulsivity). Reward-related attentional capture and cognitive inflexibility interacted to predict greater compulsivity-related problems among participants who reported obsessive-compulsive behaviors in the past month (n = 57) as well as current drinkers (n = 88). Follow-up analyses showed that, for OCD behaviors, this interaction was driven by an association between higher reward-related attentional capture and more problematic behaviors among cognitively inflexible participants only. For drinking, the same pattern was seen, albeit at trend level. Limitations: This study includes a non-clinical, online sample and is cross-sectional, thus its findings need to be interpreted with these limitations in mind. Conclusions: Reward-related attentional capture and cognitive flexibility are related to trait compulsivity and impulsivity (negative urgency) respectively, and interact to determine more problematic behaviors.

Cognitive inflexibility, Compulsivity, Impulsivity, Reward learning
0005-7916
1 - 7
Albertella, Lucy
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Le Pelley, Mike E.
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Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Westbrook, Fred
c2bbc3ec-f72f-4445-9a7b-e92007255439
Lee, Rico S.C.
31dba505-5810-4dcc-87fc-eb337b40df45
Fontenelle, Leonardo F.
859206be-2b11-438a-9b18-d22579111a6b
Grant, Jon E.
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Segrave, Rebecca A.
0ee96b6e-fd3f-47c7-990d-806312390b83
McTavish, Eugene
50e8318a-d8b9-4201-8045-5ffba091c47d
Yücel, Murat
aff092ea-35e0-476a-b9bf-ace9b84aa1e1
Albertella, Lucy
c95a7a69-10d8-4549-a155-55a42170d8c0
Le Pelley, Mike E.
4ee7b54c-9c45-40cc-9f71-a5e93d340338
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Westbrook, Fred
c2bbc3ec-f72f-4445-9a7b-e92007255439
Lee, Rico S.C.
31dba505-5810-4dcc-87fc-eb337b40df45
Fontenelle, Leonardo F.
859206be-2b11-438a-9b18-d22579111a6b
Grant, Jon E.
07372bd5-8a0d-42b4-b41b-e376c652acf3
Segrave, Rebecca A.
0ee96b6e-fd3f-47c7-990d-806312390b83
McTavish, Eugene
50e8318a-d8b9-4201-8045-5ffba091c47d
Yücel, Murat
aff092ea-35e0-476a-b9bf-ace9b84aa1e1

Albertella, Lucy, Le Pelley, Mike E., Chamberlain, Samuel R., Westbrook, Fred, Lee, Rico S.C., Fontenelle, Leonardo F., Grant, Jon E., Segrave, Rebecca A., McTavish, Eugene and Yücel, Murat (2020) Reward-related attentional capture and cognitive inflexibility interact to determine greater severity of compulsivity-related problems. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 69, 1 - 7, [101580]. (doi:10.1016/j.jbtep.2020.101580).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background and objectives: Neurocognitive processes are key drivers of addictive and compulsive disorders. The current study examined whether reward-related attentional capture and cognitive inflexibility are associated with impulsive and/or compulsive personality traits, and whether these cognitive characteristics interact to predict greater compulsivity-related problems across obsessive-compulsive and drinking behaviors. Methods: One-hundred and seventy-three participants (mean age = 34.5 years, S.D = 8.4, 42% female) completed an online visual search task to measure reward-related attentional capture and its persistence following reversal of stimulus-reward contingencies. Participants also completed questionnaires to assess trait impulsivity, compulsivity, alcohol use, and obsessive-compulsive behaviors. Results: Greater reward-related attentional capture was associated with trait compulsivity, over and above all impulsivity dimensions, while greater cognitive inflexibility was associated with higher negative urgency (distress-elicited impulsivity). Reward-related attentional capture and cognitive inflexibility interacted to predict greater compulsivity-related problems among participants who reported obsessive-compulsive behaviors in the past month (n = 57) as well as current drinkers (n = 88). Follow-up analyses showed that, for OCD behaviors, this interaction was driven by an association between higher reward-related attentional capture and more problematic behaviors among cognitively inflexible participants only. For drinking, the same pattern was seen, albeit at trend level. Limitations: This study includes a non-clinical, online sample and is cross-sectional, thus its findings need to be interpreted with these limitations in mind. Conclusions: Reward-related attentional capture and cognitive flexibility are related to trait compulsivity and impulsivity (negative urgency) respectively, and interact to determine more problematic behaviors.

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Accepted/In Press date: 27 April 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 May 2020
Published date: 17 June 2020
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2020 The Authors
Keywords: Cognitive inflexibility, Compulsivity, Impulsivity, Reward learning

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 492795
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492795
ISSN: 0005-7916
PURE UUID: 6a86e1fe-ab44-49db-8482-cdb980074fef
ORCID for Samuel R. Chamberlain: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7014-8121

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Date deposited: 14 Aug 2024 16:42
Last modified: 30 Aug 2024 02:00

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Contributors

Author: Lucy Albertella
Author: Mike E. Le Pelley
Author: Samuel R. Chamberlain ORCID iD
Author: Fred Westbrook
Author: Rico S.C. Lee
Author: Leonardo F. Fontenelle
Author: Jon E. Grant
Author: Rebecca A. Segrave
Author: Eugene McTavish
Author: Murat Yücel

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