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      Chronic alcohol exposure alters action control via hyperactive premotor corticostriatal activity

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          SUMMARY

          Alcohol use disorder (AUD) alters decision-making control over actions, but disruptions to the responsible neural circuit mechanisms are unclear. Premotor corticostriatal circuits are implicated in balancing goal-directed and habitual control over actions and show disruption in disorders with compulsive, inflexible behaviors, including AUD. However, whether there is a causal link between disrupted premotor activity and altered action control is unknown. Here, we find that mice chronically exposed to alcohol (chronic intermittent ethanol [CIE]) showed impaired ability to use recent action information to guide subsequent actions. Prior CIE exposure resulted in aberrant increases in the calcium activity of premotor cortex (M2) neurons that project to the dorsal medial striatum (M2-DMS) during action control. Chemogenetic reduction of this CIE-induced hyperactivity in M2-DMS neurons rescued goal-directed action control. This suggests a direct, causal relationship between chronic alcohol disruption to premotor circuits and decision-making strategy and provides mechanistic support for targeting activity of human premotor regions as a potential treatment in AUD.

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          In brief

          Appropriate action control relies on learning from recent experiences. Using a rodent model, Schreiner et al. find evidence that chronic alcohol exposure disrupts action control by inducing aberrant hyperactivity in premotor corticostriatal circuits. These findings support the targeting of premotor cortex activity for therapeutic treatment in alcohol use disorder.

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          Repeated Measures Correlation

          Repeated measures correlation (rmcorr) is a statistical technique for determining the common within-individual association for paired measures assessed on two or more occasions for multiple individuals. Simple regression/correlation is often applied to non-independent observations or aggregated data; this may produce biased, specious results due to violation of independence and/or differing patterns between-participants versus within-participants. Unlike simple regression/correlation, rmcorr does not violate the assumption of independence of observations. Also, rmcorr tends to have much greater statistical power because neither averaging nor aggregation is necessary for an intra-individual research question. Rmcorr estimates the common regression slope, the association shared among individuals. To make rmcorr accessible, we provide background information for its assumptions and equations, visualization, power, and tradeoffs with rmcorr compared to multilevel modeling. We introduce the R package (rmcorr) and demonstrate its use for inferential statistics and visualization with two example datasets. The examples are used to illustrate research questions at different levels of analysis, intra-individual, and inter-individual. Rmcorr is well-suited for research questions regarding the common linear association in paired repeated measures data. All results are fully reproducible.
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            Neural systems of reinforcement for drug addiction: from actions to habits to compulsion.

            Drug addiction is increasingly viewed as the endpoint of a series of transitions from initial drug use--when a drug is voluntarily taken because it has reinforcing, often hedonic, effects--through loss of control over this behavior, such that it becomes habitual and ultimately compulsive. Here we discuss evidence that these transitions depend on interactions between pavlovian and instrumental learning processes. We hypothesize that the change from voluntary drug use to more habitual and compulsive drug use represents a transition at the neural level from prefrontal cortical to striatal control over drug seeking and drug taking behavior as well as a progression from ventral to more dorsal domains of the striatum, involving its dopaminergic innervation. These neural transitions may themselves depend on the neuroplasticity in both cortical and striatal structures that is induced by chronic self-administration of drugs.
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              Actions and Habits: The Development of Behavioural Autonomy

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                101573691
                39703
                Cell Rep
                Cell Rep
                Cell reports
                2211-1247
                19 August 2023
                25 July 2023
                20 June 2023
                31 August 2023
                : 42
                : 7
                : 112675
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Psychology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA
                [2 ]The Neurosciences Graduate Program, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA
                [3 ]Lead contact
                Author notes

                AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS

                Conceptualization, D.C.S. and C.M.G.; formal analysis, D.C.S. and C.C.; funding acquisition, D.C.S. and C.M.G.; investigation, D.C.S., A.W., E.T.B., T.W., and C.M.G.; methodology, D.C.S. and C.M.G.; visualization, D.C.S. and C.M.G.; writing – original draft, D.C.S., A.W., and C.M.G.; writing – review & editing, D.C.S., C.C., E.T.B., and C.M.G.; supervision, C.M.G.; project administration, C.M.G.

                [* ]Correspondence: cgremel@ 123456ucsd.edu
                Article
                NIHMS1920466
                10.1016/j.celrep.2023.112675
                10468874
                37342908
                d37f115a-80e8-4482-851d-405849233782

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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                Cell biology
                Cell biology

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