Journal article
Neural correlates of attentional bias in addiction
R Hester, M Luijten
CNS Spectrums | Published : 2014
Abstract
A small but growing neuroimaging literature has begun to examine the neural mechanisms underlying the difficulty that substance-use dependent (SUD) groups have with ignoring salient, drug-related stimuli. Drug-related attentional bias appears to implicate the countermanding forces of cognitive control and reward salience. Basic cognitive neuroscience research suggests that ignoring emotionally evocative stimuli in our environment requires both up-regulation of control networks and down-regulation of processing in emotion and reward regions. Research to date suggests that attentional biases for drug-related stimuli emerge from a failure to sufficiently increase control of attention over salie..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council Fellowship
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was supported by an Australian Research Council Fellowship (FT110100088) (R.H.)