Journal article

Impaired error awareness and anterior cingulate cortex hypoactivity in chronic cannabis users

R Hester, L Nestor, H Garavan

Neuropsychopharmacology | Published : 2009

Abstract

Drug abuse and other psychiatric conditions (eg, schizophrenia) have been associated with a diminished neural response to errors, particularly in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) thought critical to error processing. A diminished capacity for detecting errors has been linked to clinical symptoms including the loss of insight, delusions, and perseverative behavior. A total of 16 active chronic cannabis users and 16 control participants were administered a Go/No-go response inhibition task during event-related fMRI data collection. The task provides measures of inhibitory control and error awareness. Cannabis users inhibitory control performance was equivalent to that of the control group, ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Institute on Drug Abuse


Funding Acknowledgements

This research was supported by USPHS grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse: DA01865-01, Australian Research Council Grant (RH) DP0556602 and Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Career Development Award 519730 (RH). The assistance of Gloria Roberts, Gina Joue, Jennifer Jones, and Ella McCabe are gratefully acknowledged.