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
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Albertella, Lucy
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Le Pelley, Mike E.
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Chamberlain, Samuel R.
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Westbrook, Fred
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Lee, Rico S.C.
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Fontenelle, Leonardo F.
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Grant, Jon E.
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Segrave, Rebecca A.
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McTavish, Eugene
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Yücel, Murat
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17 June 2020
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.
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Segrave, Rebecca A.
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McTavish, Eugene
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Yücel, Murat
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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, , [101580].
(doi:10.1016/j.jbtep.2020.101580).
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
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© 2020 The Authors
Keywords:
Cognitive inflexibility, Compulsivity, Impulsivity, Reward learning
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Local EPrints ID: 492795
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492795
ISSN: 0005-7916
PURE UUID: 6a86e1fe-ab44-49db-8482-cdb980074fef
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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
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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