Striatal activity and reduced white matter increase frontal activity in youths with family histories of alcohol and other substance‐use disorders performing a go/no‐go task
Acheson A, Tagamets M, Winkler A, Rowland L, Mathias C, Wright S, Hong L, Kochunov P, Dougherty D. Striatal activity and reduced white matter increase frontal activity in youths with family histories of alcohol and other substance‐use disorders performing a go/no‐go task. Brain And Behavior 2015, 5: e00352. PMID: 26221573, PMCID: PMC4511289, DOI: 10.1002/brb3.352.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdolescentAspartic AcidBrain MappingChildCorpus StriatumExecutive FunctionFamilyFemaleGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseHumansInhibition, PsychologicalLongitudinal StudiesMagnetic Resonance ImagingMaleMotor CortexNeural PathwaysProton Magnetic Resonance SpectroscopyPsychomotor PerformanceSignal Processing, Computer-AssistedSubstance-Related DisordersWhite MatterConceptsSupplementary motor areaSubstance use disordersWhite matter integrityFamily historyFrontal white matter integrityStriatal activityDorsal striatumFrontal cortical activityCortical activitySMA activityFrontal cortical projectionsDrug use disordersDorsal striatal activitySuch family historyDorsal striatum activityCortical projectionsMotor areaElevated riskOngoing longitudinal studyUse disordersWhite matterDownstream projectionsGo/