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An Overview of the Neurobiology of Impulsivity in...
Journal article

An Overview of the Neurobiology of Impulsivity in Gambling and Gaming Disorder

Abstract

Purpose of ReviewGambling disorder (GD) and gaming disorder (IGD), the two currently recognized behavioural addictions are characterized by high levels of impulsivity. Increasing research focuses on neurocognitive impulsive features in GD and IGD as these disorders can provide a “drug-free” model to study shared neural mechanisms across addictive disorders. This review provides an overview of neurobiological findings across three impulsive components of behaviour: response inhibition, delay discounting, and reward processing.Recent FindingsResponse inhibition is characterized by decreased fronto-striatal recruitment in these populations. The inclusion of emotional cues can, however, result in increased fronto-striatal responding in GD. During delay discounting, individuals with GD show steeper discounting which is associated with altered fronto-striatal representations of subjective value. Anticipatory reward processing in GD is associated with decreased ventral striatal activity, which negatively correlates with disorder severity. In IGD, evidence for enhanced reward sensitivity may be present.SummaryFuture studies are required to directly compare and contrast the neurobiological features of impulsivity across GD and IGD. Additionally, there is a strong need to incorporate longitudinal research designs to elucidate the neurobiological trajectory of these behavioural addictions. A better mechanistic understanding of impulsive features underlying substance and non-substance-based addictions, can improve prevention and treatment of addictions.

Authors

Punia K; Balodis IM

Journal

Current Behavioral Neuroscience Reports, Vol. 6, No. 4, pp. 209–218

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

December 1, 2019

DOI

10.1007/s40473-019-00190-5

ISSN

2196-2979

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