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Journal ArticleDOI

Attentional bias for drug cues in opiate dependence.

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TLDR
The results support the idea that an attentional bias for drug-related stimuli occurs in opiate dependence, and are consistent with the concept of a central role for such salient stimuli in compulsive drug use.
Abstract
Background. In a number of theories of compulsive drug use conditioned responses to stimuli associated with drug taking play a pivotal role. For example, according to incentive-sensitization theory (Robinson & Berridge, 1993), drug-related stimuli selectively capture attention, and the neural mechanisms underlying this attentional bias play a key role in the development and maintenance of drug dependence, and in relapse. However, there has been little work that assesses attentional biases in addiction. Methods. We used a pictorial probe detection task to investigate whether there is an attentional bias to stimuli associated with drug use in opiate dependence. Stimuli presented included pairs of drug-related and matched neutral pictures. Methadone-maintained opiate addicts (N = 16) were compared with age-matched controls (N = 16). Results. A mixed design analysis of variance of response times to probes revealed a significant three-way interaction of group×drug picture location×probe location. Opiate addicts had relatively faster reaction times to probes that replaced drug pictures rather than neutral pictures, consistent with the predicted attentional bias to drug-related stimuli. Conclusions. These results support the idea that an attentional bias for drug-related stimuli occurs in opiate dependence. This is consistent with the concept of a central role for such salient stimuli in compulsive drug use.

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Attentional bias in addictive behaviors: A review of its development, causes, and consequences

TL;DR: It is suggested that through classical conditioning, substance-related stimuli elicit the expectancy of substance availability, and this expectancy causes both attentional bias for substance- related stimuli and subjective craving.
Book

Cognitive Behavioural Processes across Psychological Disorders: A Transdiagnostic Approach to Research and Treatment

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed an insightful and original approach to understand these disorders, one that focuses on what they have in common, instead of examining in isolation, for example, obsessive compulsive disorders, insomnia, schizophrenia.
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Value-driven attentional capture

TL;DR: It is shown that visual search for a salient target is slowed by the presence of an inconspicuous, task-irrelevant item that was previously associated with monetary reward during a brief training session, suggesting that arbitrary and otherwise neutral stimuli imbued with value via associative learning capture attention powerfully and persistently during extinction, independently of goals and salience.
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Drug craving and addiction: integrating psychological and neuropsychopharmacological approaches

TL;DR: An integrated model explains craving and relapse in humans by the psychological mechanism of "attentional bias" and provides neuropsychopharmacological mechanisms for this bias.
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Automatic and controlled processes and the development of addictive behaviors in adolescents: a review and a model.

TL;DR: It is emphasized that adolescent alcohol use primarily takes place in a social context, and that therefore studies should not solely focus on intra-individual factors predicting substance use and misuse but also on interpersonal social factors.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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