One of the principal barriers to overcoming addiction is the propensity to relapse, even after months or years of abstinence. Relapse can be precipitated by cues and contexts associated with drug use; thus, decreasing the conditioned properties of these cues and contexts may assist in preventing relapse. The predictive power of drug cues and contexts can be reduced by repeatedly presenting them in the absence of the drug reinforcer, a process known as extinction. The potential of extinction to limit relapse has generated considerable interest and research over the past few decades. While pre-clinical animal models suggest extinction learning assists relapse prevention, treatment efficacy is often lacking when extinction learning principles...
Pavlovian conditioning models have influenced the development of cue exposure treatments for drug ab...
Since the introduction of intravenous drug self-administration methodology over 50 years ago, experi...
Animal models of relapse to drug-seeking have borrowed heavily from associative learning approaches....
Abstract: Extinction is the process by which a previously established stimulus relationship is broke...
Drug use and relapse involve learned associations between drug-associated environmental cues and dru...
Relapse to drug seeking after treatment or a period of abstinence remains a fundamental challenge fo...
Pavlovian phenomena have long served as models for the etiology, treatment, and relapse from treatme...
High rates of relapse to drug use during abstinence is a defining feature of drug addiction. In abst...
Addicted individuals are highly susceptible to relapse when exposed to drug-associated conditioned s...
High rates of relapse to drug use during abstinence is a defining feature of drug addiction. In abst...
Theoretically, cue exposure treatment should be able to prevent relapse by extinguishing conditioned...
Abstract Finding effective long-lasting treatments for drug addiction has been an elusive goal. Cons...
Results from clinical studies suggest that drug relapse and craving are often provoked by exposure t...
Extinction therapy has been proposed as a method to reduce the motivational impact of drug-associate...
Several types of maladaptive learning and memory contribute to substance use disorders (SUDs). Pavlo...
Pavlovian conditioning models have influenced the development of cue exposure treatments for drug ab...
Since the introduction of intravenous drug self-administration methodology over 50 years ago, experi...
Animal models of relapse to drug-seeking have borrowed heavily from associative learning approaches....
Abstract: Extinction is the process by which a previously established stimulus relationship is broke...
Drug use and relapse involve learned associations between drug-associated environmental cues and dru...
Relapse to drug seeking after treatment or a period of abstinence remains a fundamental challenge fo...
Pavlovian phenomena have long served as models for the etiology, treatment, and relapse from treatme...
High rates of relapse to drug use during abstinence is a defining feature of drug addiction. In abst...
Addicted individuals are highly susceptible to relapse when exposed to drug-associated conditioned s...
High rates of relapse to drug use during abstinence is a defining feature of drug addiction. In abst...
Theoretically, cue exposure treatment should be able to prevent relapse by extinguishing conditioned...
Abstract Finding effective long-lasting treatments for drug addiction has been an elusive goal. Cons...
Results from clinical studies suggest that drug relapse and craving are often provoked by exposure t...
Extinction therapy has been proposed as a method to reduce the motivational impact of drug-associate...
Several types of maladaptive learning and memory contribute to substance use disorders (SUDs). Pavlo...
Pavlovian conditioning models have influenced the development of cue exposure treatments for drug ab...
Since the introduction of intravenous drug self-administration methodology over 50 years ago, experi...
Animal models of relapse to drug-seeking have borrowed heavily from associative learning approaches....