4.4 Review

The transition to compulsion in addiction

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 21, Issue 5, Pages 247-263

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41583-020-0289-z

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation
  2. European Research Council
  3. UK Medical Research Council [MR/N02530X/1]
  4. Wellcome Trust [WT 104631/Z/14/Z/]
  5. MRC [MR/N02530X/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Compulsion is a key symptom of drug addiction. In this Review, Luscher, Robbins and Everitt integrate the neural and psychological mechanisms that underlie the transition to compulsion within a learning theory framework, highlighting the distinctions between compulsive drug taking and compulsive drug seeking. Compulsion is a cardinal symptom of drug addiction (severe substance use disorder). However, compulsion is observed in only a small proportion of individuals who repeatedly seek and use addictive substances. Here, we integrate accounts of the neuropharmacological mechanisms that underlie the transition to compulsion with overarching learning theories, to outline how compulsion develops in addiction. Importantly, we emphasize the conceptual distinctions between compulsive drug-seeking behaviour and compulsive drug-taking behaviour (that is, use). In the latter, an individual cannot stop using a drug despite major negative consequences, possibly reflecting an imbalance in frontostriatal circuits that encode reward and aversion. By contrast, an individual may compulsively seek drugs (that is, persist in seeking drugs despite the negative consequences of doing so) when the neural systems that underlie habitual behaviour dominate goal-directed behavioural systems, and when executive control over this maladaptive behaviour is diminished. This distinction between different aspects of addiction may help to identify its neural substrates and new treatment strategies.

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