Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a chronic, relapsing disease affecting 10% of individuals in the United States that is notoriously difficult to manage, with 60% untreated and 40% treated individuals relapsing within 3 years (Moos et al., 2006; Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 2021). Long-term, excessive alcohol consumption produces complex physiologic adaptations to neural circuits and signaling systems associated with stress reactivity, reward allostasis, affective processing, and cognitive function; these changes promote alcohol drinking behavior and alter associated emotional and cognitive states, contributing to relapse susceptibility (Volkow et al., 2016). One particular aspect of neural function that is intimately and reciprocally connected with alcohol use is impaired cognition (Melugin et al., 2021). A third or more of individuals with AUD display cognitive impairment on cognitive screening tools (Bruijnen et al., 2019), with executive function deficits that can persist long into abstinence (Le Berre et al., 2017). Conversely, reduced cognitive performance prior to alcohol drinking is associated with earlier onset and heavier alcohol drinking, increasing the risk for developing AUD during one's lifetime (Dawson et al., 2008;Squeglia et al., 2014). One cognitive domain that appears to be uniquely affected in AUD is cognitive flexibility, the ability to adapt one's behavior when the relationship between behavior and outcome changes (Dajani and Uddin, 2015). Impaired cognitive flexibility has high predictive value for relapse behavior, as individuals continue to drink alcohol even after the outcomes from that intake change, such as known behavioral and/or social consequences, and are less likely to seek treatment (Bates et al., 2002;Le Berre et al., 2017; Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 2021). Given the intimate, feedforward relationship between impaired cognition and alcohol drinking, it is no surprise that cognitive behavioral therapy remains an effective and durable AUD treatment (Bates et al., 2002;Sofuoglu et al., 2013). Thus, identifying pharmacological targets that could be used to develop treatments used alone or adjuvant with cognitive therapy to improve cognitive performance in alcohol dependent individuals may have a robust impact on alcohol use and treatment adherence, improving long-term health outcomes.