Elsevier

NeuroImage: Clinical

Volume 12, February 2016, Pages 348-358
NeuroImage: Clinical

Cocaine dependence and thalamic functional connectivity: a multivariate pattern analysis

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2016.08.006Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Cocaine dependence is associated with thalamic dysfunction and cognitive deficits.

  • The thalamus comprises subnuclei that differ in cognitive functions.

  • MVPA of thalamic connectivity distinguishes addicted from healthy individuals.

  • Thalamic voxels that identify addicts aggregate in clusters, resembling subnuclei.

  • Connectivity of thalamic clusters reflects specific changes in SST performance.

Abstract

Cocaine dependence is associated with deficits in cognitive control. Previous studies demonstrated that chronic cocaine use affects the activity and functional connectivity of the thalamus, a subcortical structure critical for cognitive functioning. However, the thalamus contains nuclei heterogeneous in functions, and it is not known how thalamic subregions contribute to cognitive dysfunctions in cocaine dependence. To address this issue, we used multivariate pattern analysis (MVPA) to examine how functional connectivity of the thalamus distinguishes 100 cocaine-dependent participants (CD) from 100 demographically matched healthy control individuals (HC). We characterized six task-related networks with independent component analysis of fMRI data of a stop signal task and employed MVPA to distinguish CD from HC on the basis of voxel-wise thalamic connectivity to the six independent components. In an unbiased model of distinct training and testing data, the analysis correctly classified 72% of subjects with leave-one-out cross-validation (p < 0.001), superior to comparison brain regions with similar voxel counts (p < 0.004, two-sample t test). Thalamic voxels that form the basis of classification aggregate in distinct subclusters, suggesting that connectivities of thalamic subnuclei distinguish CD from HC. Further, linear regressions provided suggestive evidence for a correlation of the thalamic connectivities with clinical variables and performance measures on the stop signal task. Together, these findings support thalamic circuit dysfunction in cognitive control as an important neural marker of cocaine dependence.

Keywords

Cocaine
Thalamus
Cognitive control
Functional connectivity
Independent component analysis
Multivariate pattern analysis

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