A dissociation in attentional control: evidence from methamphetamine dependence.

Journal: Biological Psychiatry
Published:
Abstract

Background: Selective attention comprises multiple, dissociable component processes, including task shifting and selective inhibition. The goal of this study was to test whether task-shifting, selective inhibition, or both processes were impaired in long-term but currently abstinent methamphetamine-dependent individuals.

Methods: Participants were 34 methamphetamine-dependent subjects and 20 nonsubstance abusing controls who were tested on an alternating-runs switch task with conflict sequences that required subjects to switch tasks on every second trial (AABBAABB).

Results: Methamphetamine-dependent individuals committed more errors on trials that required inhibition of distracting information compared with controls (methamphetamine = 17%; controls = 13%; p = .02). By contrast, error rates did not differ between the groups on switch trials (methamphetamine = 7%; controls = 6%; p = .68).

Conclusions: These results indicate that selective inhibition, but not task switching, is selectively compromised by methamphetamine.

Authors
Ruth Salo, Thomas Nordahl, Charles Moore, Christy Waters, Yutaka Natsuaki, Gantt Galloway, Shawn Kile, Edith Sullivan