PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Altered risk-based decision making following adolescent alcohol use results from an imbalance in reinforcement learning in rats.

  • Jeremy J Clark,
  • Nicholas A Nasrallah,
  • Andrew S Hart,
  • Anne L Collins,
  • Ilene L Bernstein,
  • Paul E M Phillips

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0037357
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 5
p. e37357

Abstract

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Alcohol use during adolescence has profound and enduring consequences on decision-making under risk. However, the fundamental psychological processes underlying these changes are unknown. Here, we show that alcohol use produces over-fast learning for better-than-expected, but not worse-than-expected, outcomes without altering subjective reward valuation. We constructed a simple reinforcement learning model to simulate altered decision making using behavioral parameters extracted from rats with a history of adolescent alcohol use. Remarkably, the learning imbalance alone was sufficient to simulate the divergence in choice behavior observed between these groups of animals. These findings identify a selective alteration in reinforcement learning following adolescent alcohol use that can account for a robust change in risk-based decision making persisting into later life.