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Review
. 2020 Apr 20:99:109861.
doi: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2020.109861. Epub 2020 Jan 10.

From sign-tracking to attentional bias: Implications for gambling and substance use disorders

Affiliations
Review

From sign-tracking to attentional bias: Implications for gambling and substance use disorders

Patrick Anselme et al. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. .

Abstract

Sign-tracking behavior in Pavlovian autoshaping is known to be a relevant index of the incentive salience attributed to reward-related cues. Evidence has accumulated to suggest that animals that exhibit a sign-tracker phenotype are especially vulnerable to addiction and relapse due to their proneness to attribute incentive salience to drug cues, and their relatively weak cognitive and attentional control over their behavior. Interestingly, sign-tracking is also influenced by reward uncertainty in a way that may promote gambling disorder. Research indicates that reward uncertainty sensitizes sign-tracking responses and favors the development of a sign-tracker phenotype, compatible with the conditioned attractiveness of lights and sounds in casinos for problem gamblers. The study of attentional biases in humans (an effect akin to sign-tracking in animals) leads to similar observations, notably that the propensity to develop attraction for conditioned stimuli (CSs) is predictive of addictive behavior. Here we review the literature on drug addiction and gambling disorder, highlighting the similarities between studies of sign-tracking and attentional biases.

Keywords: Addiction; Attentional bias; Gambling; Sign-tracking; Uncertainty.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of competing interest The authors report no conflicts of interest.