Female hands rolling a marijuana joint

Adult and adolescent cannabis users are no more likely than non-users to lack motivation or be unable to enjoy life鈥檚 pleasure, new research has shown, suggesting there is no scientific basis for the stereotype often portrayed in the media.

We鈥檙e so used to seeing 鈥榣azy stoners鈥 on our screens that we don鈥檛 stop to ask whether they鈥檙e an accurate representation of cannabis users. Our work implies that this is in itself a lazy stereotype

Martine Skumlien

Cannabis users also show no difference in motivation for rewards, pleasure taken from rewards, or the brain鈥檚 response when seeking rewards, compared to non-users.

Cannabis is the third most commonly used controlled substance worldwide, after alcohol and nicotine. A 2018 report from the NHS Digital Lifestyles Team stated that almost one in five (19%) of 15-year-olds in England had used cannabis in the previous 12 months, while in 2020 the National Institute on Drug Abuse reported the proportion in the United States to be 28% of 15-16-year-olds.

A common stereotype of cannabis users is the 鈥榮toner鈥 鈥 think Jesse Pinkman in Breaking Bad, 探花直播Dude in 探花直播Big Lebowski, or, more recently, Argyle in Stranger Things. These are individuals who are generally depicted as lazy and apathetic.

At the same time, there has been considerable concern of the potential impact of cannabis use on the developing brain and that using cannabis during adolescence might have a damaging effect at an important time in an individual鈥檚 life.

A team led by scientists at UCL, the 探花直播 of Cambridge and the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience at King鈥檚 College London carried out a study examining whether cannabis users show higher levels of apathy (loss of motivation) and anhedonia (loss of interest in or pleasure from rewards) when compared to controls and whether they were less willing to exert physical effort to receive a reward. 探花直播research was part of the CannTEEN study.

探花直播results are published in the International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology.

探花直播team recruited 274 adolescent and adult cannabis users who had used cannabis at least weekly over the past three months, with an average of four days per week, and matched them with non-users of the same age and gender.

Participants completed questionnaires to measure anhedonia, asking them to rate statements such as 'I would enjoy being with family or close friends'. They also completed questionnaires to measure their levels of apathy, which asked them to rate characteristics such as how interested they were in learning new things or how likely they were to see a job through to the end.

Cannabis users scored slightly lower than non-users on anhedonia 鈥 in other words, they appeared better able to enjoy themselves 鈥 but there was no significant difference when it came to apathy. 探花直播researchers also found no link between frequency of cannabis use and either apathy or anhedonia in the people who used cannabis.

Martine Skumlien, a PhD candidate in the Department of Psychiatry at the 探花直播 of Cambridge, said: 鈥淲e were surprised to see that there was really very little difference between cannabis users and non-users when it came to lack of motivation or lack of enjoyment, even among those who used cannabis every day. This is contrary to the stereotypical portrayal we see on TV and in movies.鈥

In general, adolescents tended to score higher than adults on anhedonia and apathy in both user and non-user groups, but cannabis use did not augment this difference.

Dr Will Lawn, from the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience at King鈥檚 College London, said: 鈥淭here鈥檚 been a lot of concern that cannabis use in adolescence might lead to worse outcomes than cannabis use during adulthood. But our study, one of the first to directly compare adolescents and adults who use cannabis, suggests that adolescents are no more vulnerable than adults to the harmful effects of cannabis on motivation, the experience of pleasure, or the brain鈥檚 response to reward.

鈥淚n fact, it seems cannabis may have no link 鈥 or at most only weak associations 鈥 with these outcomes in general. However, we need studies that look for these associations over a long period of time to confirm these findings.鈥

Just over half of participants also carried out a number of behavioural tasks. 探花直播first of these assessed physical effort. Participants were given the option to perform button-presses in order to win points, which were later exchanged for chocolates or sweets to take home. There were three difficulty levels and three reward levels; more difficult trials required faster button pressing. On each trial the participant could choose to accept or reject the offer; points were only accrued if the trial was accepted and completed.

In a second task, measuring how much pleasure they received from rewards, participants were first told to estimate how much they wanted to receive each of three rewards (30 seconds of one of their favourite songs, one piece of chocolate or a sweet, and a 拢1 coin) on a scale from 鈥榙o not want at all鈥 to 鈥榠ntensely want鈥. They then received each reward in turn and were asked to rate how pleasurable they found them on a scale from 鈥榙o not like at all鈥 to 鈥榠ntensely like鈥.

探花直播researchers found no difference between users and non-users or between age groups on either the physical effort task or the real reward pleasure task, confirming evidence from other studies that found no, or very little, difference.

Skumlien added: 鈥淲e鈥檙e so used to seeing 鈥榣azy stoners鈥 on our screens that we don鈥檛 stop to ask whether they鈥檙e an accurate representation of cannabis users. Our work implies that this is in itself a lazy stereotype, and that people who use cannabis are no more likely to lack motivation or be lazier than people who don鈥檛.

鈥淯nfair assumptions can be stigmatising and could get in the way of messages around harm reduction. We need to be honest and frank about what are and are not the harmful consequences of drug use.鈥

Earlier this year, the team published a study that used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to look at brain activity in the same participants as they took part in a brain imaging task measuring reward processing. 探花直播task involved participants viewing orange or blue squares while in the scanner. 探花直播orange squares would lead to a monetary reward, after a delay, if the participant made a response.

探花直播researchers used this set up to investigate how the brain responds to rewards, focusing in particular on the ventral striatum, a key region in the brain鈥檚 reward system. They found no relationship between activity in this region and cannabis use, suggesting that cannabis users had similar reward systems as non-users.

Professor Barbara Sahakian, from the Department of Psychiatry at the 探花直播 of Cambridge, said: 鈥淥ur evidence indicates that cannabis use does not appear to have an effect on motivation for recreational users. 探花直播participants in our study included users who took cannabis on average four days a week and they were no more likely to lack motivation. However, we cannot rule out the possibility that greater use, as seen in some people with cannabis-use disorder, has an effect.

鈥淯ntil we have future research studies that follow adolescent users, starting from onset through to young adulthood, and which combine measures of motivation and brain imaging, we cannot determine for certain that regular cannabis use won鈥檛 negatively impact motivation and the developing brain.鈥

This research was funded by the Medical Research Council with additional support from the Aker Foundation, National Institute for Health Research and Wellcome.

References

Skumlien, M, et al. IJNP; 24 Aug 2022; DOI: 10.1093/ijnp/pyac056

Skumlien, M, et al.听 Neuropsychopharmacology;听6 April 2022; DOI:听10.1038/s41386-022-01316-2



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