This paper presents a biopsychological theory of drug addiction, the `Incentive-Sensitization Theory'. The theory addresses three fundamental questions. The first is: why do addicts crave drugs? That is, what is the psychological and neurobiological basis of drug craving? The second is: why does drug craving persist even after long periods of abstinence? The third is whether `wanting' drugs (drug craving) is attributable to `liking' drugs (to the subjective pleasurable effects of drugs)? The theory posits the following. 1. (1) Addictive drugs share the ability to enhance mesotelencephalic dopamine neurotransmission.2. (2) One psychological function of this neural system is to attribute `incentive salience' to the perception and mental repre...
Cocaine addiction is an enormous medical problem for which there is currently no effective pharmacot...
Advances in neuroscience identified addiction as a chronic brain disease with strong genetic, neurod...
Addiction can be defined as drug-induced changes in the central nervous system (CNS) that produce ma...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75373/1/j.1360-0443.95.8s2.19.x.pd
The question of addiction concerns the process by which drug-taking behavior, in certain individuals...
The phenomenology of drug craving has become the focus of much research within addictive disorders b...
This thesis contains an overview of the mechanisms of addiction as well as a description of the impa...
Cocaine addiction affects approximately 1.4 million Americans, costing the government billions of do...
Neuroscientists continue to grapple with the conundrum of compulsive drug use. Why do compulsions to...
Why does moderate exposure to a drug reward make natural rewards increasingly attractive to organis...
Craving is typically thought of as a classically conditioned response characterized by an elevated m...
[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT REQUEST OF AUTHOR.] The Incentive Sensitization ...
People take addictive drugs to elevate mood, but with repeated use these drugs produce serious unwan...
How do addictive drugs hijack the brain's reward system? This review speculates how normal, physiolo...
Substances of abuse are known to activate and disrupt neuronal circuits in the brain reward system. ...
Cocaine addiction is an enormous medical problem for which there is currently no effective pharmacot...
Advances in neuroscience identified addiction as a chronic brain disease with strong genetic, neurod...
Addiction can be defined as drug-induced changes in the central nervous system (CNS) that produce ma...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75373/1/j.1360-0443.95.8s2.19.x.pd
The question of addiction concerns the process by which drug-taking behavior, in certain individuals...
The phenomenology of drug craving has become the focus of much research within addictive disorders b...
This thesis contains an overview of the mechanisms of addiction as well as a description of the impa...
Cocaine addiction affects approximately 1.4 million Americans, costing the government billions of do...
Neuroscientists continue to grapple with the conundrum of compulsive drug use. Why do compulsions to...
Why does moderate exposure to a drug reward make natural rewards increasingly attractive to organis...
Craving is typically thought of as a classically conditioned response characterized by an elevated m...
[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT REQUEST OF AUTHOR.] The Incentive Sensitization ...
People take addictive drugs to elevate mood, but with repeated use these drugs produce serious unwan...
How do addictive drugs hijack the brain's reward system? This review speculates how normal, physiolo...
Substances of abuse are known to activate and disrupt neuronal circuits in the brain reward system. ...
Cocaine addiction is an enormous medical problem for which there is currently no effective pharmacot...
Advances in neuroscience identified addiction as a chronic brain disease with strong genetic, neurod...
Addiction can be defined as drug-induced changes in the central nervous system (CNS) that produce ma...