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Chunk #4 — Introduction

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Impact of binge drinking during college on resting state functional connectivity.
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increased salience-habit network (dACC-caudate) relative to light drinkers (Arienzo et al., 2019). Regarding the executive control network, both increased (Sousa et al., 2019) and decreased (Weiland et al., 2014) connectivity within this network were reported in binge drinkers compared to controls. Decreased connectivity between executive control and memory network (inferior frontal gyrus-hippocampus) was also reported in binge drinkers (Arienzo et al., 2019). Additionally, decreased Ventral Attention Network (VAN; part of the executive control network) connectivity, was correlated with greater binge drinking in a group of college students with varying levels of binge drinking (Herman et al., 2019). Finally, other than the reward, salience, and executive control networks, a longitudinal resting-state magnetoencephalography (MEG) study found that compared to controls, college binge drinkers showed an increased Default Mode Network connectivity (DMN; Correas et al., 2016).