1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910780991903321

Titolo

What is addiction? / / edited by Don Ross [and others]

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cambridge, Mass., : MIT Press, ©2010

ISBN

1-282-54199-4

9786612541995

0-262-28824-9

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (461 p.)

Altri autori (Persone)

RossDon <1962->

Disciplina

616.86

Soggetti

Substance abuse

Drug addiction

Compulsive behavior

Cognitive neuroscience

Neurosciences - Social aspects

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Contents; Introduction: What Is Addiction?; 1 Neuroeconomics of Addiction: The Contribution of Executive Dysfunction; 2 Neurobiology of Pathological Gambling; 3 Genetic Influences on Addiction: Alcoholism as an Exemplar; 4 Addiction as a Breakdown in the Machinery of Decision Making; 5 Economic Models of Pathological Gambling; 6 Addiction: A Latent Property of the Dynamics of Choice; 7 Addiction and Altruism; 8 The Core Process in Addictions and Other Impulses: Hyperbolic Discounting versus Conditioning and Cognitive Framing; 9 Measuring Dispositions to Bundle Choices

10 Neural Recruitment during Self-Control of Smoking: A Pilot fMRI Study11 Anticipatory Processing as a Transdisciplinary Bridge in Addiction; 12 Impulsivity and Its Association with Treatment Development for Pathological Gambling and Substance Use Disorders; 13 Medical Models of Addiction; 14 Addiction and the Diagnostic Criteria for Pathological Gambling; 15 Irrational Action and Addiction; 16 Defining Addiction and Identifying the Public Interest in Liberal Democracies; Contributors; Index



Sommario/riassunto

"The image of the addict in popular culture combines victimhood and moral failure; we sympathize with addicts in films and novels because of their suffering and their hard-won knowledge. And yet actual scientific knowledge about addiction tends to undermine this cultural construct. In What Is Addiction? leading addiction researchers from neuroscience, psychology, genetics, philosophy, economics, and other fields survey the latest findings in addiction science. They discuss such questions as whether addiction is one kind of condition, or several; if addiction is neurophysiological, psychological, or social, or incorporates aspects of all of these; to what extent addicts are responsible for their problems, and how this affects health and regulatory policies; and whether addiction is determined by inheritance or environment or both. The chapter authors discuss the possibility of a unifying basis for different addictions (considering both substance addiction and pathological gambling), offering both neurally and neuroscientifically grounded accounts as well as discussions of the social context of addiction. There can be no definitive answer yet to the question posed by the title of this book; but these essays demonstrate an advance over the simplistic conception embedded in popular culture."--Jacket.