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Browsing by Author "Alessi, Jonathan"
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Item Correction: High-intensity sweet taste as a predictor of subjective alcohol responses to the ascending limb of an intravenous alcohol prime: an fMRI study(Springer Nature, 2024) Alessi, Jonathan; Dzemidzic, Mario; Benson, Katherine; Chittum, George; Kosobud, Ann; Harezlak, Jaroslaw; Plawecki, Martin H.; O’Connor, Sean J.; Kareken, David A.; Neurology, School of MedicineCorrection to: Neuropsychopharmacology 10.1038/s41386-023-01684-3, published online 07 August 2023 The publication date for reference 21 was corrected from 2016 to 1977. The correct reference should read “Radloff LS. The CES-D Scale. Appl Psychol Meas. 1977;1:385–401”. The original article has been corrected.Item High-intensity sweet taste as a predictor of subjective alcohol responses to the ascending limb of an intravenous alcohol prime: an fMRI study(Springer Nature, 2024) Alessi, Jonathan; Dzemidzic, Mario; Benson, Katherine; Chittum, George; Kosobud, Ann; Harezlak, Jaroslaw; Plawecki, Martin H.; O’Connor, Sean J.; Kareken, David A.; Neurology, School of MedicineHigh-intensity sweet-liking has been linked to alcohol use disorder (AUD) risk. However, the neural underpinning of this association is poorly understood. To find a biomarker predictive of AUD, 140 participants (social and heavy drinkers, ages 21-26) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during a monetary incentive delay (MID) task and stimulation with high (SucroseHigh)- and low-concentration sucrose, as well as viscosity-matched water. On another day after imaging, and just before free-access intravenous alcohol self-administration, participants experienced a 30 mg% alcohol prime (10 min ascent) using the Computerized Alcohol Infusion System. Principal component analysis (PCA) of subjective responses (SR) to the prime's ascending limb generated enjoyable (SRenjoy) and sedative (SRsed) intoxication components. Another PCA created one component reflective of self-administered alcohol exposure (AE) over 90 min. Component loadings were entered as regressors in a voxel-wise general linear fMRI model, with reward type as a fixed factor. By design, peak prime breath alcohol concentration was similar across participants (29 ± 3.4 mg%). SRenjoy on the prime's ascending limb correlated positively with [SucroseHigh > Water] in the supplementary motor area and right dorsal anterior insula, implicating the salience network. Neither SR component correlated with the brain's response to MID. AE was unrelated to brain reward activation. While these findings do not support a relationship between alcohol self-administration and (1) subjective liking of or (2) regional brain response to an intensely sweet taste, they show that alcohol's enjoyable intoxicating effects on the rising limb correspond with anterior insular and supplementary motor area responses to high-concentration sucrose taste. No such associations were observed with MID despite robust activation in those regions. Insula and supplementary motor area responses to intense sensations relate to a known risk factor for AUD in a way that is not apparent with a secondary (monetary) reward.Item Tangent space functional reconfigurations in individuals at risk for alcohol use disorder(ArXiv, 2024-05-24) Moghaddam, Mahdi; Dzemidzic, Mario; Guerrero, Daniel; Liu, Mintao; Alessi, Jonathan; Plawecki, Martin H.; Harezlak, Jaroslaw; Kareken, David; Goñi, Joaquín; Neurology, School of MedicineHuman brain function dynamically adjusts to ever-changing stimuli from the external environment. Studies characterizing brain functional reconfiguration are nevertheless scarce. Here we present a principled mathematical framework to quantify brain functional reconfiguration when engaging and disengaging from a stop signal task (SST). We apply tangent space projection (a Riemannian geometry mapping technique) to transform functional connectomes (FCs) and quantify functional reconfiguration using the correlation distance of the resulting tangent-FCs. Our goal was to compare functional reconfigurations in individuals at risk for alcohol use disorder (AUD). We hypothesized that functional reconfigurations when transitioning in/from a task would be influenced by family history of alcohol use disorder (FHA) and other AUD risk factors. Multilinear regression model results showed that engaging and disengaging functional reconfiguration were driven by different AUD risk factors. Functional reconfiguration when engaging in the SST was negatively associated with recent drinking. When disengaging from the SST, however, functional reconfiguration was negatively associated with FHA. In both models, several other factors contributed to the explanation of functional reconfiguration. This study demonstrates that tangent-FCs can characterize task-induced functional reconfiguration, and that it is related to AUD risk.