Responses of the Neurobiological Craving Signature to smoking versus alternative social rewards predict craving and monthly smoking in adolescents
Maddalena Tamellini (CRNL-SOCIALHEALTH), Joyce Dieleman, Guillaume Sescousse (CRNL-PSYR2, CRNL), Maartje Luijten, Leonie Koban (CRNL-SOCIALHEALTH)

TL;DR
This study uses fMRI to examine how adolescent brain responses to smoking versus social cues relate to craving and smoking behavior, revealing early neural markers of addiction influenced by peer exposure.
Contribution
It introduces the Neurobiological Craving Signature (NCS) as a marker to predict craving and smoking in adolescents, emphasizing social influences and early neural changes.
Findings
NCS responses to smoking cues are higher in adolescent smokers.
NCS responses predict individual craving and monthly smoking.
Peer exposure correlates with craving-related brain responses.
Abstract
Smoking remains the leading cause of preventable mortality worldwide. Adolescents are particularly vulnerable to the development of tobacco addiction due to ongoing brain maturation and susceptibility to social influences, such as exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). Craving -the strong desire to use drugs -already emerges with non-daily tobacco use and predicts continued use and relapse. However, the roles of craving and ETS exposure during the early stages of tobacco use in adolescence remain poorly understood. In this pre-registered study, we harness a recently developed fMRI marker of craving -the Neurobiological Craving Signature (NCS) -to compare craving-related brain responses to smoking versus social cues in adolescent Experimental Smokers (N=100) and Non-smokers (N=48) with varying levels of ETS exposure levels. Results showed that NCS responses to smoking cues…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSmoking Behavior and Cessation · Anxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes · Death Anxiety and Social Exclusion
