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Curing the broken brain model of addiction: Neurorehabilitation from a systems perspective

期刊

ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS
卷 112, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2020.106602

关键词

Addiction; Brain disease model; Neurorehabilitation; Systems approach

资金

  1. EC project Virtual Brain Cloud [EC H2020 82642]
  2. cognitive Rehabilitation Gaming System (ERC PoC) [840052]
  3. RGS@Home (EIT Health) [20689]
  4. European Research Council (ERC) [840052] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The dominant biomedical perspective views addiction as chronic brain diseases, but this broken brain model has limitations. A systems-level perspective is proposed to better capture the development of addiction and its dynamic influence on subsequent brain adaptations.
The dominant biomedical perspective on addictions has been that they are chronic brain diseases. While we acknowledge that the brains of people with addictions differ from those without, we argue that the broken brain model of addiction has important limitations. We propose that a systems-level perspective more effectively captures the integrated architecture of the embodied and situated human mind and brain in relation to the development of addictions. This more dynamic conceptualization places addiction in the broader context of the addicted brain that drives behavior, where the addicted brain is the substrate of the addicted mind, that in turn is situated in a physical and socio-cultural environment. From this perspective, neurorehabilitation should shift from a broken-brain to a systems theoretical framework, which includes high-level concepts related to the physical and social environment, motivation, self-image, and the meaning of alternative activities, which in turn will dynamically influence subsequent brain adaptations. We call this integrated approach system-oriented neurorehabilitation. We illustrate our proposal by showing the link between addiction and the architecture of the embodied brain, including a systems-level perspective on classical conditioning, which has been successfully translated into neurorehabilitation. Central to this example is the notion that the human brain makes predictions on future states as well as expected (or counterfactual) errors, in the context of its goals. We advocate systemoriented neurorehabilitation of addiction where the patients' goals are central in targeted, personalized assessment and intervention.

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