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Addiction Is a Learning Disorder

Jabberwocky

Frumious Bandersnatch
Joined
Nov 3, 1999
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Most of Us Still Don’t Get It: Addiction Is a Learning Disorder
Addiction is not about our brains being "hijacked" by drugs or experiences—it's about learned patterns of behavior. Our inability to understand this leads to no end of absurdities.


Maia Szalavitz | 7/17/14 said:
Sex, food, shopping, the Internet, video games—all of these activities are being studied by neuroscientists, which frequently leads to headlines like "Oreos May Be As Addictive As Cocaine" and "Brain Activity of Sex Addicts Similar to That of Drug Addicts."

These stories carry the very strange implication that our brains have areas “for” drug addiction that can be “hijacked” by experiences like sex, junk food and MILF porn. Shockingly, kids today with their Tinder and Grindr and nomophobia are misusing the regions nature gave us to allow us to get hooked on wholesome pleasures like heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine.

Of course, put that way, these claims sound completely absurd. Evolution didn’t provide us with brain circuitry dedicated to alcoholism and other drug addictions—it gave us brain networks that motivate us to seek pleasure and avoid pain in ways that promote survival and reproduction. To understand addiction, we’ve got to stop falling for arguments that obscure this truth and make unsound claims about brain changes that cannot tell us anything about its real nature.

This means that any study that says it shows that something is addictive because the stuff “lights up” the same brain areas seen in addiction is tautological. Anything that provides pleasure or certain types of stress relief will activate these regions. If it doesn’t activate these areas, it can’t be perceived as pleasant, desirable or comforting.

If you image the brain of a musician hitting the perfect note, a coder getting sudden insight on a complex problem, a father watching his child take her first step, you will see some of these areas go wild. That means these folks are experiencing joy: It doesn’t tell us that F sharp, a particular line of code or baby steps are “addictive.” Simply seeing activation in the brain’s pleasure and desire circuitry doesn’t reveal addiction.

In fact, despite hundreds of millions of dollars spent on neuroimaging research, we still don’t have a scan that can reliably separate addicted people from casual drug users or accurately predict relapse. Some studies have suggested that this may be possible but none have found a replicable diagnostic scan, even though some clinicians market the use of scanners in treatment.

Moreover, recent sex and food addiction research showing similar alterations to those seen in drug addictions strikes at the heart of arguments made about the uniquely addictive nature of psychoactive chemicals. For example, on the website of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, a section on the “science of addiction” explains that “addiction is considered a brain disease because drugs change the brain.” But this idea—first promoted heavily by the former head of NIDA, Alan Leshner—isn’t the whole story.

All experience changes the brain—it has to, in order to leave a mark on memory. If experience didn’t alter us, we couldn’t perceive, recall or react to it. So, simply changing the brain doesn’t make addiction a disease because not all changes are pathological. In order to use brain scans to prove addiction is a disease, you’d have to show changes that are only seen in addicted people, that occur in all cases of addiction and that predict relapse and recovery. No one has yet done this.

Secondly, if you can be addicted to activities like sex, gambling and the Internet—which do not directly chemically alter the brain—how can they be addictive, if addiction is caused by drug-related brain changes?

Researchers long argued that the pharmacology of particular drugs is what makes them addictive—that, say, cocaine’s alterations in the dopamine system cause a worse addiction than sex or food do because the drug directly affects the way the brain handles that chemical. But since sex and food only affect these chemicals naturally—and can create compulsive behavior that’s just as hard for some people to quit—why should we see cocaine differently?

Of course, none of this is to say that addiction isn’t a medical disorder or that addicted people shouldn’t be treated with compassion. What it does show, I believe, is that addiction is a learning disorder, a condition where a system designed to motivate us to engage in activities helpful to survival and reproduction develops abnormally and goes awry. While this theory is implicitly accepted or stated outright in much of today’s neuroscience research on addiction—and it runs through specific theories of addiction, including theories as varied as those of Stanton Peele, George Koob, current NIDA head Nora Volkow and Kent Berridge—its implications are not well understood by many treatment providers and the public. Instead, addiction is a seen as a “chronic, progressive disease,” which can only remit or worsen and which pretty much affects all addicted people in the same way.

But the system that goes wrong in addiction is designed to make us persist despite negative consequences: If we didn’t have such a mechanism, we’d never push through the difficulties that characterize both love and parenting. Unfortunately when this motivational network gets channeled toward an activity that is destructive to our life’s prospects, it becomes dangerous.

Neuroscience can help us better understand this circuitry. However, the fact that non-drug addictions exist shows that drugs are neither necessary nor sufficient to “hijack” it.

What this means is that addiction isn’t simply a response to a drug or an experience—it is a learned pattern of behavior that involves the use of soothing or pleasant activities for a purpose like coping with stress. This is why simple exposure to a drug cannot cause addiction: The exposure must occur in a context where the person finds the experience pleasant and/or useful and must be deliberately repeated until the brain shifts its processing of the experience from deliberate and intentional to automatic and habitual.

This is also why pain patients cannot be “made addicted” by their doctors. In order to develop an addiction, you have to repeatedly take the drug for emotional relief to the point where it feels as though you can’t live without it. That doesn’t happen when you take a drug as prescribed in a regular pattern—it can only happen when you start taking doses early or take extra when you feel a need to deal with issues other than pain. Until your brain learns that the drug is critical to your emotional stability, addiction cannot be established and this learning starts with voluntary choices. To put it bluntly, if I kidnap you, tie you down and shoot you up with heroin for two months, I can create physical dependence and withdrawal symptoms—but only if you go out and cop after I free you will you actually become an addict.

Again, this doesn’t mean that people who voluntarily make those choices don’t have biological, genetic or environmental reasons that make them more vulnerable and perhaps less culpable—but it does mean that addiction can’t happen without your own will becoming involved. It also means that babies can’t be “born addicted.” Even if they suffer withdrawal after being exposed in utero, they haven’t engaged in the crucial learning pattern that shows them that the drug equals relief and they can hardly go out and seek more despite negative consequences.

Addiction—whether to sex, drugs or rock & roll—is a disorder of learning. It’s not a disorder of hedonism or selfishness and it’s not a sign of “character defects.” This learning, of course, involves the brain—but because learning is involved, cultural, social and environmental factors are critical in shaping it.

If we want to get beyond “Is Sex Addictive?” and “Crack vs. Junk Food: Which Is Worse?” we’ve got to recognize that we’ve been asking the wrong questions. The real issue is what purpose does addictive behavior serve and how can it be replaced with more productive and healthy pursuits—not how can we stop the demon drug or activity of the month. We’ve been doing the equivalent of trying to treat obsessive-compulsive disorder by banning hand sanitizer when what we really need to understand is why and how obsessions and compulsions develop in particular people.
http://www.substance.com/most-of-us-still-dont-get-it-addiction-is-a-learning-disorder/9176/

Thank god there are journalists out there who're interested in more than whether or not there is such a thing as sex or porn addiction... And if you don't like how she calls it a "learning disorder," think of it more as a "learned disorder."
 
Last edited by a moderator:
It's interesting, I wouldn't call it a learning disorder per se though.

Someone posted a YouTube video a while back about a woman who was diagnosed with early onset Parkinson disease, and she was given some new miracle drug that upped the dopamine in here brain to counteract her brains inability to produce dopamine. She came from a heavily religious family, she was one of those types. They had to keep upping her dosages as her condition progressed just to keep her at normality. She fell into quite a deep gambling addiction, it was interesting to hear her account of it all though.

I can't find the video now though, it was in two parts and I think was a radio interview.

In order to develop an addiction, you have to repeatedly take the drug for emotional relief to the point where it feels as though you can’t live without it. That doesn't happen when you take a drug as prescribed in a regular pattern—it can only happen when you start taking doses early or take extra when you feel a need to deal with issues other than pain. Until your brain learns that the drug is critical to your emotional stability, addiction cannot be established and this learning starts with voluntary choices.

I quite like the way this is conveyed, it seems to strike some truth in my perspective on things, anyone else care to weigh in with some thoughts?
 
Dont psychological addictions like gambling, sex, stealing, etc help release certain neurochemicals though? It would make sense that such an activity that hooks you that deep must be (at least partly) affecting the reward pathway. This is just me taking a guess at it though through my own perspective of having an addictive personality.
 
It's interesting, I wouldn't call it a learning disorder per se though.

Someone posted a YouTube video a while back about a woman who was diagnosed with early onset Parkinson disease, and she was given some new miracle drug that upped the dopamine in here brain to counteract her brains inability to produce dopamine. She came from a heavily religious family, she was one of those types. They had to keep upping her dosages as her condition progressed just to keep her at normality. She fell into quite a deep gambling addiction, it was interesting to hear her account of it all though.

I can't find the video now though, it was in two parts and I think was a radio interview.

That radio lab program part on is on post 20 and the second part is in post 4 of this thread.. it also has a great audio book called the compas of pleasure linked as well.

The Brain and Addiction
 
Addiction is a disease, not a learning disability lol. The non addict has no damn idea what addiction is or feels like. I along with probably many others here have gone to Rehab before so they know what I mean.
 
The primary reason the "non addict" had no idea what addiction is like is mainly because of cultural factors and the treatment industrial complex, not to mention the disease model itself. All those factors create an environment where "normal" people (those without "addictions") are able to define themselves in part by looking to the addict and saying that they are not like them. Just another case of the insecurity, demonizing and far of the other and scapegoating.

Too bad I haven't seen any posts here who have actually seemed to understand the point the Maia was actually trying to make obvious for you in her articles... Sad, considering where I've posted this. I was expecting more enlightened, insightful responses her on bluelight rather than the same old popular addiction cultural bullshit.

slim, ro, space, where are you when I need you! :( *sniff sniff*
 
Here I come, to save the day!!!

Except that, I don't have time to respond in detail now.
I did like the article, and I will be back tomorrow, if I can, to put in my two cents' worth.
 
Okay, here are some responses.
I was very interested in this article, but I feel that I need much more information or a 2- (or multi-) way discussion to understand this better.
I may be missing something in my understanding, so please feel free to fill me in if that is so ;)


addiction is a learning disorder, a condition where a system designed to motivate us to engage in activities helpful to survival and reproduction develops abnormally and goes awry.

I think that this is a very interesting way to see it. Survival and reproduction take a back seat to serious addiction, and it seems counter-intuitive until you re-think addiction, and begin to see it this way.

But the system that goes wrong in addiction is designed to make us persist despite negative consequences: If we didn’t have such a mechanism, we’d never push through the difficulties that characterize both love and parenting. Unfortunately when this motivational network gets channeled toward an activity that is destructive to our life’s prospects, it becomes dangerous.

Wow, sounds so nefarious when you put it this way. We need motivation to deal with setbacks and difficulties, but this system is taken over by the addiction and we then have to deal with setbacks and difficulties surrounding getting our daily fix.

addiction isn’t simply a response to a drug or an experience—it is a learned pattern of behavior that involves the use of soothing or pleasant activities for a purpose like coping with stress.

This explains why people can trade an addiction to alcohol for one to exercise, for example. Use a different activity to accomplish the same things.

Secondly, if you can be addicted to activities like sex, gambling and the Internet—which do not directly chemically alter the brain—how can they be addictive, if addiction is caused by drug-related brain changes?

But sex, gambling, and the internet serve as stimuli which lead to brain changes. So this point doesn’t make sense.

Researchers long argued that the pharmacology of particular drugs is what makes them addictive—that, say, cocaine’s alterations in the dopamine system cause a worse addiction than sex or food do because the drug directly affects the way the brain handles that chemical. But since sex and food only affect these chemicals naturally—and can create compulsive behavior that’s just as hard for some people to quit—why should we see cocaine differently?

I have long believed that we should not see cocaine addiction as different from food or sex addiction.

This is also why pain patients cannot be “made addicted” by their doctors. In order to develop an addiction, you have to repeatedly take the drug for emotional relief to the point where it feels as though you can’t live without it. That doesn’t happen when you take a drug as prescribed in a regular pattern—it can only happen when you start taking doses early or take extra when you feel a need to deal with issues other than pain.

What? Doesn’t this miss the point? Relief from physical pain IS emotional relief as well.

To put it bluntly, if I kidnap you, tie you down and shoot you up with heroin for two months, I can create physical dependence and withdrawal symptoms—but only if you go out and cop after I free you will you actually become an addict.
Why does this seem ridiculous to me, even after reading this article? If you tied me down for 2 months, I would likely experience plenty of emotional relief each time you shot me up. If you were an hour or two late one time, I would be starting withdrawal, and feel very relieved that I got my fix. It doesn’t seem to have much to do with choice – just emotional relief.

it does mean that addiction can’t happen without your own will becoming involved
I am not seeing this, based on the previous quote and my response.

It also means that babies can’t be “born addicted.” Even if they suffer withdrawal after being exposed in utero, they haven’t engaged in the crucial learning pattern that shows them that the drug equals relief and they can hardly go out and seek more despite negative consequences.

They haven’t learned exactly what the drug looks like, or what it is called, or how to administer it, but they have learned that the feeling of the drug brings relief. They are not capable of going out to buy more, or shooting up (etc.). Okay. But they need the shit. They can even die due to withdrawals. “Oh, don’t worry, she is not addicted because she doesn’t know the name of the drug.” Whaa?
I guess the key is to separate tolerance, withdrawal, and “addiction”.


If we want to get beyond “Is Sex Addictive?” and “Crack vs. Junk Food: Which Is Worse?” we’ve got to recognize that we’ve been asking the wrong questions. The real issue is what purpose does addictive behavior serve and how can it be replaced with more productive and healthy pursuits—not how can we stop the demon drug or activity of the month. We’ve been doing the equivalent of trying to treat obsessive-compulsive disorder by banning hand sanitizer when what we really need to understand is why and how obsessions and compulsions develop in particular people.

There we go. This paragraph is a good one, imo. The banning hand sanitizer example is spot on. But replacing alcohol addiction with exercise addiction is not going to do much good for people. Instead, replacing addictive behavior with non-addictive behavior is the key. Breaking the loop, so to speak. But this article doesn’t even hint at how to do that…
 
This is also why pain patients cannot be “made addicted” by their doctors. In order to develop an addiction, you have to repeatedly take the drug for emotional relief to the point where it feels as though you can’t live without it. That doesn’t happen when you take a drug as prescribed in a regular pattern—it can only happen when you start taking doses early or take extra when you feel a need to deal with issues other than pain.

Slimvictor replied: What? Doesn’t this miss the point? Relief from physical pain IS emotional relief as well.

When I read this part originally, I thought it was wrong from my own personal understanding, but I didn't know how to rebuttal it. I have to agree entirely with your response Slimvictor.

I have long believed that we should not see cocaine addiction as different from food or sex addiction.

Surely you can't blanket all addiction into being the same. I would have thought that cocaine addiction does differ from sex addiction. Whilst the majority of underlying causes would be there, and a large proportion of the negative symptoms and lifestyle impacts. There are always going to be subtle differences, and would be in part one reason why you could never have a 'one treatment fixes all' (if we discounted people who don't respond to a single treatment) kind of approach.

I guess the key is to separate tolerance, withdrawal, and “addiction”.

I think this line is very important. I want to skew off topic a little bit and think about Ketamine "addiction" - tolerance exists, there isn't really a physical withdrawal (AFIK) but we've heard many counts of "addiction". Would this mean addiction has to be catagorised in itself into physiological and psychological. Surely as a result not all addiction is the same.

Excuse me if I've broken the context and the article was actually only just comparing sex addiction and cocaine, and not using them as reference points for addiction disorders.
 
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