Publication | Open Access
Risky Decisions and Their Consequences: Neural Processing by Boys with Antisocial Substance Disorder
142
Citations
63
References
2010
Year
Adolescent boys with ASD had extensive neural hypoactivity during risky decision-making, coupled with decreased activity during reward and increased activity during loss. These neural patterns may underlie the dangerous, excessive, sustained risk-taking of such boys. The findings suggest that the dysphoria, reward insensitivity, and suppressed neural activity observed among older addicted persons also characterize youths early in the development of substance use disorders.
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