Juan Carlos Bustamante
University of Zaragoza
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Publication
Featured researches published by Juan Carlos Bustamante.
Addiction Biology | 2017
Víctor Costumero; Juan Carlos Bustamante; Patricia Rosell-Negre; P. Fuentes; Juan José Llopis; César Ávila; Alfonso Barrós-Loscertales
Cocaine addiction is characterized by alterations in motivational and cognitive processes. Recent studies have shown that some alterations present in cocaine users may be related to the activity of large functional networks. The aim of this study was to investigate how these functional networks are modulated by non‐drug rewarding stimuli in cocaine‐dependent individuals. Twenty abstinent cocaine‐dependent and 21 healthy matched male controls viewed erotic and neutral pictures while undergoing a functional magnetic resonance imaging scan. Group independent component analysis was then performed in order to investigate how functional networks were modulated by reward in cocaine addicts. The results showed that cocaine addicts, compared with healthy controls, displayed diminished modulation of the left frontoparietal network in response to erotic pictures, specifically when they were unpredicted. Additionally, a positive correlation between the length of cocaine abstinence and the modulation of the left frontoparietal network by unpredicted erotic images was found. In agreement with current addiction models, our results suggest that cocaine addiction contributes to reduce sensitivity to rewarding stimuli and that abstinence may mitigate this effect.
BMC Research Notes | 2014
Carlos Salavera; José Luis Antoñanzas; Juan Carlos Bustamante; José Carrón; Pablo Usán; Pilar Teruel; Carmen Bericat; Lucía Monteagudo; Soledad Larrosa; José M Tricás; Orosia Lucha; Raquel Noé; Laurane Jarie; Raquel Cerra
BackgroundAttention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a condition that begins in childhood but can continue into adulthood, and may be the cause of many disadaptive behaviors, as in the case of homeless people, who often display a high incidence of personality disorders. The goal of this study is to analyze the comorbidity of ADHD with axis II disorders in a Spanish homeless population.ResultsThe outcomes show high comorbidity between these two kinds of disorders, and that the prevalence of axis II disorders is higher among people with ADHD than among the general population.ConclusionsFrom these results we can draw the conclusion that in homeless people ADHD in childhood continues into adulthood, when it is very often observed together with personality disorders. Finally, the implications of this study both for clinical practice and for future lines of research are discussed.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Paola Fuentes-Claramonte; César Ávila; Aina Rodríguez-Pujadas; Noelia Ventura-Campos; Juan Carlos Bustamante; Víctor Costumero; Patricia Rosell-Negre; Alfonso Barrós-Loscertales
Current perspectives on cognitive control acknowledge that individual differences in motivational dispositions may modulate cognitive processes in the absence of reward contingencies. This work aimed to study the relationship between individual differences in Behavioral Activation System (BAS) sensitivity and the neural underpinnings involved in processing a switching cue in a task-switching paradigm. BAS sensitivity was hypothesized to modulate brain activity in frontal regions, ACC and the striatum. Twenty-eight healthy participants underwent fMRI while performing a switching task, which elicited activity in fronto-striatal regions during the processing of the switch cue. BAS sensitivity was negatively associated with activity in the lateral prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex and the ventral striatum. Combined with previous results, our data indicate that BAS sensitivity modulates the neurocognitive processes involved in task switching in a complex manner depending on task demands. Therefore, individual differences in motivational dispositions may influence cognitive processing in the absence of reward contingencies.
Brain Imaging and Behavior | 2017
Patricia Rosell-Negre; Juan Carlos Bustamante; Paola Fuentes-Claramonte; Víctor Costumero; Sergio Benabarre; Alfonso Barrós-Loscertales
Reward may modulate the cognitive processes required for goal achievement, while individual differences in personality may affect reward modulation. Our aim was to test how different monetary reward magnitudes modulate brain activation and performance during goal-directed behavior, and whether individual differences in reward sensitivity affect this modulation. For this purpose, we scanned 37 subjects with a parametric design in which we varied the magnitude of monetary rewards (€0, €0.01, €0.5, €1 or €1.5) in a blocked fashion while participants performed an interference counting-Stroop condition. The results showed that the brain activity of left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and the striatum were modulated by increasing and decreasing reward magnitudes, respectively. Behavioral performance improved as the magnitude of monetary reward increased while comparing the non reward (€0) condition to any other reward condition, or the lower €0.01 to any other reward condition, and this improvement was related with individual differences in reward sensitivity. In conclusion, the locus of influence of monetary incentives overlaps the activity of the regions commonly involved in cognitive control.
Brain Imaging and Behavior | 2017
Víctor Costumero; Patricia Rosell-Negre; Juan Carlos Bustamante; Paola Fuentes-Claramonte; Juan José Llopis; César Ávila; Alfonso Barrós-Loscertales
Cocaine addicts present reduced activity in the left frontoparietal network, a brain network associated with cognitive control, during the processing of non-drug reward related stimuli (Costumero et al., Addiction Biology 22:479–489, 2015). However, the involvement of this network in drug-related stimuli processing remains unclear. Here, fifteen cocaine-dependent men and fifteen healthy matched controls viewed cocaine-related, erotic, aversive, and neutral pictures during an fMRI session. Group independent component analysis was then performed to investigate how functional networks were modulated by the different emotional images. The results showed that the cocaine-dependent group showed stronger left frontoparietal network activity during the processing of cocaine-related pictures than the control group. Furthermore, the activity of this network during cocaine image processing was positively associated with the years of cocaine use in addicted subjects. In conclusion, our results indicate that the left frontoparietal network is affected in cocaine-dependent men, and may be related to the cognitive control deficits shown in addiction.
NeuroImage | 2016
Paola Fuentes-Claramonte; César Ávila; Aina Rodríguez-Pujadas; Víctor Costumero; Noelia Ventura-Campos; Juan Carlos Bustamante; Patricia Rosell-Negre; Alfonso Barrós-Loscertales
10th annual International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation | 2017
Juan Carlos Bustamante; José Luis Antoñanzas; Elena Escolano; Ana Cristina Blasco; Teresa Coma-Roselló; Manuel Lizalde
Revista electrónica de investigación y docencia creativa / Variante de tit.: ReiDoCrea | 2016
Juan Carlos Bustamante; Eva Vicente Sánchez; Natalia Larraz Rábanos; José Carrón Sánchez; José Luis Antoñanzas Laborda; Carlos Salavera Bordás
Nuevos escenarios en la docencia universitaria: Novos escenarios da docencia universitaria, 2016, ISBN 978-84-15524-32-8, págs. 91-96 | 2016
Juan Carlos Bustamante; José Luis Antoñanzas Laborda; Javier Chueca Cía; Patricia Navas Macho; Natalia Larraz Rábanos; Cristina Di Giusto Valle; María Eugenia Martín Palacio; Carlos Salavera Bordás
European scientific journal | 2016
Francisco Javier Zarza-Alzugaray; Juan Carlos Bustamante; Oscar Casanova; Santos Orejudo