datacite.yml 2.7 KB

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  1. authors:
  2. -
  3. firstname: Lucas
  4. lastname: Dwiel
  5. affiliation: 'Dartmouth College'
  6. -
  7. firstname: Angela
  8. lastname: Henricks
  9. affiliation: 'Washington State University'
  10. -
  11. firstname: Jiang
  12. lastname: Gui
  13. affiliation: 'Dartmouth College'
  14. -
  15. firstname: Wilder
  16. lastname: Doucette
  17. affiliation: 'Dartmouth College'
  18. title: 'Evaluation of corticostriatal oscillations as a monitoring biomarker for ethanol and sweet/fat food consumption in rats'
  19. description: 'The majority of individuals that abuse addictive substances tend to struggle with more than one, therefore optimal therapeutic strategies should generalize across substances. Although closed-loop interventions (neuromodulatory and mobile-device based) are emerging for the treatment of substance use, they require monitoring biomarkers that detect when an individual is about to use, or is using, a substance. Based on our prior work we hypothesized that corticostriatal oscillations could be used to detect the consumption of 10% ethanol (EtOH) or sweet-fat food (SF) from all other behaviors using the same oscillatory features. We conditioned Sprague-Dawley rats to consume EtOH or SF and then recorded corticostriatal local field potentials during consumption of the two substances and their naturalistic controls (i.e., water/house-chow). We used lasso and simple logistic regressions to determine which corticostriatal features were predictive of consuming each substance alone or combined. Although both substances were detectable (EtOH = 0.81±0.01 and SF = 0.68±0.01; area under the receiver operator characteristic curve), the models did not detect consumption of the other substance (SF→EtOH = 0.43±0.01 and EtOH→SF = 0.49±0.01) and models built using both datasets only detected the consumption of EtOH (gen→EtOH = 0.63±0.04 and gen→SF = 0.5±0.04). These results suggest that a model that generalizes across substances is not feasible. However, due to the low consumption of EtOH, the difficulty in differentiating EtOH from water, and the inability to detect imminent EtOH consumption it may be that EtOH is not salient enough in rats to be a useful model substance in this context.'
  20. keywords:
  21. - Neuroscience
  22. - Electrophysiology
  23. - Biomarker
  24. - 'Machine learning'
  25. license:
  26. name: 'Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication'
  27. url: 'https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/'
  28. funding: null
  29. references:
  30. -
  31. id: 'tba'
  32. reftype: IsSupplementTo
  33. citation: Dwiel,L., Henricks, A., Gui, J., and Doucette, W. Evaluation of corticostriatal oscillations as a monitoring biomarker for ethanol and sweet/fat food consumption in rats. PLoS Computational Biology
  34. resourcetype: Dataset
  35. templateversion: 1.2