Jabberwocky
Frumious Bandersnatch
Hello
I've been reading about incentive salience theories of drug addiction and now I've branched out and it seems like some neuropsychologists are very loose with the term 'reverse tolerance'. They seem to use it in a widely disparate fashion...for instance, I thought some reserve the concept for the possibility of a drug that in its administration requires less in the future for equal intensity (although am I incorrect and is this too 'cutting edge' a use for the concept?). Others will use it for the process of upregulation (or replacing missing monoamines) that comes about from abstaining from the drug.
The latter use is very uninteresting to me...in my view, 'reverse tolerance' and 'reversing the effects of tolerance' (from amphetamine or something) are QUITE different concepts.
I'm interested whether there are any new (or old hehe) drugs that cause reverse tolerance in the first sense: that a use of the drug will require less in the future to bring about same effects. This would require long-term biochemical changes (enzymatic pathways maybe?) or something similar, correct?
can you help a conceptually confused philosopher make sense of your concepts?
I've been reading about incentive salience theories of drug addiction and now I've branched out and it seems like some neuropsychologists are very loose with the term 'reverse tolerance'. They seem to use it in a widely disparate fashion...for instance, I thought some reserve the concept for the possibility of a drug that in its administration requires less in the future for equal intensity (although am I incorrect and is this too 'cutting edge' a use for the concept?). Others will use it for the process of upregulation (or replacing missing monoamines) that comes about from abstaining from the drug.
The latter use is very uninteresting to me...in my view, 'reverse tolerance' and 'reversing the effects of tolerance' (from amphetamine or something) are QUITE different concepts.
I'm interested whether there are any new (or old hehe) drugs that cause reverse tolerance in the first sense: that a use of the drug will require less in the future to bring about same effects. This would require long-term biochemical changes (enzymatic pathways maybe?) or something similar, correct?
can you help a conceptually confused philosopher make sense of your concepts?

) the headspace induced by it, becoming more 'psychically' sensitive, rather than a direct physiochemical interaction.