This article describes how recent advances in understanding the evolutionary functions of emotions can help to reconcile diverse approaches to substance abuse. Emotions can be understood as specialized states that prepare individuals to cope with opportunities and threats. Drugs that artificially induce pleasure or block normal suffering disrupt these evolved mechanisms, and thus should tend to interfere with adaptive behavior, even if the drugs are medically safe. Nonetheless, we routinely use drugs quite safely to block defenses like pain, cough, and anxiety. This apparent contradiction is explained by the relatively small costs of defenses compared to the potentially huge costs of not expressing a defensive response when it is needed. An...
Abstract: An evolutionary approach is a powerful framework which can bring new perspectives on any a...
The intent of this article is to introduce the evolutionary concept of alternative strategies into t...
This paper reviews the new ideas emerging from neuroscience regarding the question of why some peopl...
In this article, ontogenetic and phylogenetic causes of drug abuse and links to human emotional deve...
Emotions research is now routinely grounded in evolution, but explicit evolutionary analyses of emot...
Recent progress in the evolutionary understanding of behavior may greatly assist psychiatry. Althoug...
Addiction is a complex disease whose manifestation is unique to each individual patient. Despite thi...
This article reviews the evolutionary origins and functions of the capacity for anxiety, and relevan...
Human addiction to psychotropic and mood altering substances is an ongoing international problem. Wh...
Abstract: Researchers have recently applied evolutionary life history theory to the understanding of...
Drug addiction has afflicted mankind for centuries, yet the mech-anisms by which particular drugs le...
This article aims to analyze the evolutionary foundations of human addiction to psychoactive substan...
The history of drug abuse is as long as history. While all drugs are being abused, this paper has at...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/65529/1/j.1600-0447.1992.tb03234.x.pd
Abstract By looking at drug addiction from an evolutionary perspective, we may understand its underl...
Abstract: An evolutionary approach is a powerful framework which can bring new perspectives on any a...
The intent of this article is to introduce the evolutionary concept of alternative strategies into t...
This paper reviews the new ideas emerging from neuroscience regarding the question of why some peopl...
In this article, ontogenetic and phylogenetic causes of drug abuse and links to human emotional deve...
Emotions research is now routinely grounded in evolution, but explicit evolutionary analyses of emot...
Recent progress in the evolutionary understanding of behavior may greatly assist psychiatry. Althoug...
Addiction is a complex disease whose manifestation is unique to each individual patient. Despite thi...
This article reviews the evolutionary origins and functions of the capacity for anxiety, and relevan...
Human addiction to psychotropic and mood altering substances is an ongoing international problem. Wh...
Abstract: Researchers have recently applied evolutionary life history theory to the understanding of...
Drug addiction has afflicted mankind for centuries, yet the mech-anisms by which particular drugs le...
This article aims to analyze the evolutionary foundations of human addiction to psychoactive substan...
The history of drug abuse is as long as history. While all drugs are being abused, this paper has at...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/65529/1/j.1600-0447.1992.tb03234.x.pd
Abstract By looking at drug addiction from an evolutionary perspective, we may understand its underl...
Abstract: An evolutionary approach is a powerful framework which can bring new perspectives on any a...
The intent of this article is to introduce the evolutionary concept of alternative strategies into t...
This paper reviews the new ideas emerging from neuroscience regarding the question of why some peopl...