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n = 6 males
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no trick subjects apprised of drink type just before scan is this different from Urban? Is it different from Yoder?
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how consistent is the “typical alcohol curve?” what can be done to control it?
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compare to Urban who got 12% change in BP in VS in 11 males.
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n = 11 males; 10 females, analyzed separately
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design issues: no baseline – what happens if DA goes DOWN with placebo – is this still a valid comparison? a valid interpretation? how do we know they got to steady state? is that necessary for their analysis? why might DA go down with ‘placebo’ drink is 3 drinks-worth; forced drinking in 5-10 minutes? aversive? differences are masked by vodka smell – will this induce negative reward-prediction error?
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DA release related to frequency of max-drinking day? what does this mean? do men differ from women because they are demographically different?
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blinded? expectations? order effects? (need sham scan)
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cue (visual and OLFACTORY) n = 8 males
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bolus study order effects? why? can it be avoided? not self admin is iv alcohol like drinking? look at behavioral self reports
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Conclusions- I Data conform to observations of dopaminergic function in reward prediction. Dopamine’s coding of expectation may be relevant to alcoholism (see Lapish, Seaman, & Chandler, 2006. ACER). No CS CS unexpected reward predicted reward absence of predicted reward from: Schultz, Dayan, & Montague, 1997, Science.
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is the Yoder design really analogous to the Schulz experiment in monkeys? Don’t we need prior conditioning? What is the author’s answer to this?** would like to know if anyone’s BP went wrong way (DA down) in Urban study – if so, it would agree with Yoder. BAC in Boileau study did not correlate with BP (agrees with Urban -- claimed it didn’t correlate with) **Yoder et al: probably claim that prior drinking exposure IS conditioning. So when they see and hear alcohol cues – they expect to get reward. Consider figure 3. Subjects said: “It was clear I was about to get drunk.”
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Yoder: SHAS and AUDIT scores NOT correlated with BP Boileau: SHAS scores did not correlate with BP impulsiveness predicted BP change in VS
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