Inhibitory Control and Drug Abuse Prevention w wwwwwwwwwwwwwwww Michael T. Bardo • Diana H. Fishbein Richard Milich Editors Inhibitory Control and Drug Abuse Prevention From Research to Translation Editors Michael T. Bardo Richard Milich Center for Drug Abuse Research Translation Center for Drug Abuse Research Translation University of Kentucky University of Kentucky 741 S. Limestone, Lexington Kastle Hall, Lexington, KY 40506 KY 40536-0509 USA USA [email protected] [email protected] Diana H. Fishbein Transdisciplinary Science and Translational Prevention Program RTI International 5520 Research Park Drive Suite 210 UMBC Main Campus Baltimore, MD 21228 USA [email protected] ISBN 978-1-4419-1267-1 e-ISBN 978-1-4419-1268-8 DOI 10.1007/978-1-4419-1268-8 Springer New York Dordrecht Heidelberg London Library of Congress Control Number: 2011922748 © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2011 All rights reserved. This work may not be translated or copied in whole or in part without the written permission of the publisher (Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, 233 Spring Street, New York, NY 10013, USA), except for brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis. Use in connection with any form of information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed is forbidden. The use in this publication of trade names, trademarks, service marks, and similar terms, even if they are not identified as such, is not to be taken as an expression of opinion as to whether or not they are subject to proprietary rights. Printed on acid-free paper Springer is part of Springer Science+Business Media (www.springer.com) Preface This book provides a general overview of the current knowledge base regarding behavioral inhibition and its etiology, from genetic and neurobiological underpin- nings to social factors that influence its development. Importantly, it also focuses on how this research may be used to design more targeted and potentially more effective drug abuse prevention interventions, given the critical role that inhibition plays in pathways to drug abuse. The idea for this book originated from a sympo- sium entitled “Neural and Behavioral Mechanisms of Inhibitory Control: Implications for Drug Abuse Prevention,” which was held at the annual Society for Prevention Research (SPR) conference in Washington DC in May 2009. Several of the speakers at that SPR symposium (Jentsch, Fillmore, Lejuez, Yurgelun-Todd, and Lynam) have contributed chapters to this book based on their work. SPR has been instrumental in advancing the translation of basic neurobehavioral research into practice and policy. All too often, basic research and prevention practice occur in a parallel fash- ion, rather than in an integrated cross-cutting fashion. It is important for multi- level and comprehensive research to be based on two-way communications so that basic researchers understand the problems in the field of prevention, and that practitioners are apprised of new advances in the laboratory. In the absence of an understanding of etiological mechanisms in inhibitory dyscontrol, preven- tive interventions are likely not to exert as beneficial effects as are possible. The overall goal for such translational efforts is to enhance and more appropriately target evidence-based interventions. This goal was epitomized in 2010 when the theme selected for the SPR conference held in Denver, Colorado was entitled “Cells to Society: Prevention at all Levels.” This book reflects an attempt to build on that theme. This book is intended for a wide audience, including researchers, practitioners, policy scientists and makers, and trainees at the graduate and advanced under- graduate levels. The contributors across the chapters represent experts chosen from an array of disciplines, including genetics, neuroscience, psychiatry, psy- chology, sociology, family studies, and health communication. We are grateful for v vi Preface their substantive contributions and appreciate their effort to provide the types of insight that are needed to move the field forward. Hopefully, some of this written word will translate into improving the lives of adolescents at risk. Lexington, KY Michael T. Bardo Baltimore, MD Diana H. Fishbein Lexington, KY Richard Milich Contents Part I Introduction 1 Translating Research on Inhibitory Control for the Prevention of Drug Abuse .......................................................... 3 Elizabeth M. Ginexi and Elizabeth B. Robertson Part II Neurobehavioral Approaches for Understanding Inhibitory Control 2 Animal Models of Behavioral Processes that Underlie the Occurrence of Impulsive Behaviors in Humans ............................ 13 Jerry B. Richards, Amy M. Gancarz, and Larry W. Hawk, Jr. 3 Monoaminergic Regulation of Cognitive Control in Laboratory Animals ........................................................................... 43 J. David Jentsch, Stephanie M. Groman, Alex S. James, and Emanuele Seu 4 Genetic and Environmental Determinants of Addiction Risk Related to Impulsivity and Its Neurobiological Substrates ........ 63 Michelle M. Jacobs, Didier Jutras-Aswad, Jennifer A. DiNieri, Hilarie C. Tomasiewicz, and Yasmin L. Hurd 5 Impaired Inhibitory Control as a Mechanism of Drug Abuse .......................................................................................... 85 Mark T. Fillmore and Jessica Weafer 6 Neuroimaging, Adolescence, and Risky Behavior ................................ 101 John C. Churchwell and Deborah A. Yurgelun-Todd vii viii Contents Part III Translating Research on Inhibitory Control to At-Risk Populations 7 Inhibitory Control Deficits in Childhood: Definition, Measurement, and Clinical Risk for Substance Use Disorders .......... 125 Iliyan Ivanov, Jeffrey Newcorn, Kelly Morton, and Michelle Tricamo 8 Impulsivity and Deviance ....................................................................... 145 Donald R. Lynam 9 Impulsivity and Adolescent Substance Use: From Self-Report Measures to Neuroimaging and Beyond ............................................... 161 Matthew J. Gullo, Sharon Dawe, and Meredith J. McHugh 10 A Functional Analytic Framework for Understanding Adolescent Risk-Taking Behavior ......................................................... 177 Laura MacPherson, Jessica M. Richards, Anahi Collado, and C.W. Lejuez 11 Peer Influences on Adolescent Risk Behavior ...................................... 211 Dustin Albert and Laurence Steinberg Part IV T ranslating Research on Inhibitory Control to Prevention Interventions 12 The Effects of Early Adversity on the Development of Inhibitory Control: Implications for the Design of Preventive Interventions and the Potential Recovery of Function ........................ 229 Philip A. Fisher, Jacqueline Bruce, Yalchin Abdullaev, Anne M. Mannering, and Katherine C. Pears 13 Early Risk for Problem Behavior and Substance Use: Targeted Interventions for the Promotion of Inhibitory Control ....................... 249 Nathaniel R. Riggs, Mark T. Greenberg, and Brittany Rhoades 14 Designing Media and Classroom Interventions Targeting High Sensation Seeking or Impulsive Adolescents to Prevent Drug Abuse and Risky Sexual Behavior ............................. 263 Rick S. Zimmerman, R. Lewis Donohew, Philip Palmgreen, Seth Noar, Pamela K. Cupp, and Brenikki Floyd 15 Self-Regulation and Adolescent Drug Use: Translating Developmental Science and Neuroscience into Prevention Practice ......................................................................... 281 Thomas J. Dishion, Joshua C. Felver-Gant, Yalchin Abdullaev, and Michael I. Posner Contents ix Part V Conclusion 16 Implications for Translational Prevention Research: Science, Policy, and Advocacy ................................................................ 305 Anthony Biglan and Diana H. Fishbein 17 Future Directions for Research on Inhibitory Control and Drug Abuse Prevention ................................................................... 317 Michael T. Bardo, Richard Milich, and Diana H. Fishbein Index ................................................................................................................. 331
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