Commonalities and differences in trait-like, risky, and utilitarian decision-making styles between abstinent heroin-dependent individuals and their siblings
Wan-Sen Yan, Yan Lan, Su-Jiao Liu

TL;DR
The study compares decision-making styles in abstinent heroin users and their siblings to understand if poor decisions come from drug use or family traits.
Contribution
The study identifies shared decision-making deficits in heroin users and their siblings, suggesting potential familial vulnerabilities.
Findings
Both heroin users and their siblings showed higher procrastination and risk-taking compared to healthy controls.
Heroin users, but not their siblings, showed lower competent decision-making and more utilitarian choices in self-involving dilemmas.
Logistic regression confirmed similar patterns in decision-making deficits between heroin users and their siblings.
Abstract
Heroin dependence is associated with poor performance on laboratory-based decision-making paradigms. However, it remains unclear whether these deficits may have predated drug abuse due to potential familial susceptibilities or emerged as a consequence of chronic drug use. A family study may help clarify this important issue, so this study was to compare various decision-making aspects between heroin-dependent individuals and their siblings. A total of 70 abstinent heroin-dependent individuals (HAs), 69 unaffected biological siblings of the HAs (Siblings), and 74 unrelated healthy subjects (HCs) were included and tested on trait-like, risky, and utilitarian decision-making domains, using the Melbourne Decision-Making Questionnaire (MDMQ), the Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART), and the Moral Decision-Making Task (MDMT). Data indicated that both HAs and Siblings scored higher on MDMQ…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDecision-Making and Behavioral Economics · Substance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
