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New developments in understanding addiction

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Title: New developments in understanding addiction


1
New developments in understanding addiction
  • Robert West
  • University College London
  • December 2006
  • www.rjwest.co.uk

2
Outline
  • Understanding human motivation
  • Addiction to cigarettes
  • The process of smoking cessation

3
Human motivation
Humans are more or less instinctive,
habit-driven, emotional decision-makers with a
propensity to plan ahead, powerfully influenced
by our social world, with a sense of identity
which can act as a source of self-control
4
Responses
  • At every moment our behaviour is generated by the
    balance between impulses and inhibitory forces
    active at that precise moment

Responses
Impulses versus inhibitory forces
5
Impulses
  • Impulses can be generated by
  • Triggers interacting with innate dispositions
    (instincts) and learned dispositions (habits)
  • Motives feelings of desire (anticipated
    pleasure or satisfaction) and/or need
    (anticipated relief from unpleasantness or
    tension)
  • They decay quickly unless refreshed or sustained
    by triggers or motives

Responses
Impulses versus inhibitory forces
Triggers
Motives
6
Motives
  • Motives can be generated by
  • Reminders interacting with the level internal
    tension at the time
  • Evaluations beliefs about what is good/bad,
    right/wrong, useful/detrimental etc.

Responses
Impulses versus inhibitory forces
Triggers
Motives
Reminders
Evaluations
7
Evaluations
  • Evaluations are generated by
  • Recall of observations
  • Analysis, inference
  • Accepting what others say
  • Motives
  • Plans

Responses
Impulses versus inhibitory forces
Triggers
Motives
Reminders
Evaluations
Plans
8
Plans
  • Plans are mental actions generated when
  • Actions are considered to be required in the
    future
  • Actions are considered to be more likely to meet
    desires or needs if undertaken at a future time
  • Actions meeting desires or needs do have a
    sufficient priority to be enacted at the moment

Responses
Impulses versus inhibitory forces
Triggers
Motives
Reminders
Evaluations
Plans
9
The human motivational system
Plans (intentions)
Evaluations (beliefs)
External environment (stimuli, information)
Internal environment (percepts, drives,
emotional states, arousal, ideas, frame of mind)
Motives (wants etc.)
Internal stimulation
Impulses (urges etc.)
Responses
External stimulation
Flow of influence through the system
10
The importance of the moment
Evaluations, wants, emotional states, impulses
and plans are only present when triggered and
have no influence when not present
  • Everything we think, feel or do is a reaction to
    what happened or our state just prior to that
    acting on our dispositions
  • We only think about things when we are prompted
    to do so
  • The way that we think or feel about things
    depends to some degree on what prompted this
  • Not thinking about things is an important method
    of reducing tension

11
How dispositions come about
Dispositions
Genetic endowment
Experience
12
The development of dispositions
Waddingtons epigenetic landscape
Environmental forces
Critical periods points where the chreods fork
Deep chreods small forces will not lead to
escape the system will settle back once they are
removed but if the system is on a cusp a small
force will tip it into a new path
13
Identity
Identity refers to a disposition to generate
particular thoughts and feelings about ourselves
  • People differ in the propensity to think about
    ourselves, the nature of the thoughts and
    feelings that we have, and how consistent and
    coherent these are
  • Identity is a very important source of motives
    it is the foundation of personal norms that shape
    and set boundaries on our behaviour

14
Self-control
Self-control refers to wants and needs that arise
from evaluations associated with our identity
  • Self-control is a cornerstone of behaviour
    change. The moment-to-moment wants and needs
    arising from that must be strong enough to
    overcome impulses, wants and needs coming from
    other sources
  • The exercise of self-control is effortful it
    requires and uses up mental resources

15
Addiction and dependence
Addictions are activities that are given an
unhealthy priority because of a disordered
motivational system
Dependence refers to the nature of that disorder.
It varies from individual to individual and
behaviour to behaviour
16
Motivation to smoke
Smoking
Impulse to smoke
Cues/triggers
Desire to smoke
Need to smoke
Anticipated pleasure/ satisfaction
Nicotine hunger
Unpleasant mood and physical symptoms
Anticipated benefit
Reminders
Positive evaluations of smoking
Smoker identity
Beliefs about benefits of smoking
Plan to smoke
Nicotine dependence involves generation of
acquired drive, withdrawal symptoms, strong
desires from anticipated pleasure or satisfaction
and direct simulation of impulses through
associative learning
17
Motivation not to smoke
Not smoking
Inhibition
Cues/triggers
Desire not to smoke
Need not to smoke
Anticipated praise
Anticipated disgust, guilt or shame Fears about
health
Anticipated self-respect
Positive evaluations of not smoking negative
evaluations of smoking
Reminders
Beliefs about benefits of not smoking
Non-smoker identity
Plan not to smoke
Nicotine dependence probably also involves
impairment of impulse control mechanisms
undermining response inhibition
18
What smokers say about stopping
  • At any one time, when asked, most smokers report
    that they
  • want to stop, citing health concerns as the main
    reason
  • intend to stop some time in the future
  • regret having ever started smoking
  • have tried to stop in the past
  • have tried nicotine replacement to help them stop
  • are trying to cut down
  • but a minority
  • are ready to try to stop right now
  • are willing to see a stop smoking advisor or
    attend a stop smoking group

19
Going beyond what smokers say
  • Many smokers
  • will respond positively to an offer of help with
    stopping who would not have done if they had been
    first asked whether they were interested in
    stopping
  • will suddenly stop without making any prior plans
    to do so
  • who say they plan to stop at a particular time or
    within a particular time window do not try to
    stop
  • who try to stop, will later fail to report that
    they tried to stop if that quit attempt does not
    last very long
  • misjudge what it is they find difficult about not
    smoking focusing on the activity when in fact
    they are responding to a basic pharmacologically-d
    riven need

20
The process leading up to quit attempts
Motivational tension
  • Smokers experience varying degrees of want or
    need (when it enters their consciousness) to do
    something about their smoking
  • That motivational tension comes into and out of
    existence at varying levels of intensity

21
The process leading up to quit attempts Triggers
  • Triggers put the idea of stopping in the mind of
    the smoker in such a way that the desire or need
    to change overwhelms motivation not to change
  • The change is either adopted immediately or a
    plan is made to stop in the future

22
Generating more quit attempts by increasing
tension
Change in internal or external environment
Motivational tension
Competing motivations
Time
Low level of motivation
Increased motivational tension
Attempt
23
Generating more quit attempts by reducing
competing motivations
Motivational tension
Reduced threshold
Competing motivations
Time
Attempt
24
Generating more quit attempts by creating more
potential triggers
Motivational tension
More potential triggers
Competing motivations
Time
Increase in frequency of triggers
Attempt
25
Attempts to stop smoking
  • These are switches in identity from smoker to
    any of
  • smoker attempting to stop
  • smoker trying not to smoke
  • would-be non-smoker
  • definite non-smoker etc.

26
Identity and behaviour in smoking cessation
Smoking
Attempting to stop
Identity
Not smoking
Behaviour
Cigarettes
Time
27
Success of quit attempts
  • The new identity must generate wants and needs
    that are powerful enough to counter impulses,
    wants and needs arising from the disposition to
    smoke whenever these arise
  • As time passes, the impulses, wants and needs to
    smoke will usually decrease to some degree
    because of physiological normalisation and so
    the degree of self-control required will diminish
  • However, habituation will often also decrease the
    wants and needs not to smoke

28
Motivation to smoke during a quit attempt
Action threshold (restraint, competing motives)
Lapses
Impulse to smoke
Day 1
Day 2
Day 5
Day 10
Day 20
29
Causes of relapse same day
  • Same-day relapse is most often a result of the
    new identity being too unstable to withstand the
    relatively modest wants and needs to smoke
    arising from pharmacological dependence and/or
    social situations
  • But it can arise from powerful pharmacological
    impulses, want or needs or instabilities in the
    system or events that precipitate heightened
    wants, needs or impulses

30
Relapse Early weeks
  • Relapse in the early weeks is most often a result
    of strong wants and needs arising from
    pharmacological dependence with social and other
    motives superimposed on this
  • But it can result from instabilities in the
    system, moments of weakness, low levels of
    motivational resources required to exercise
    self-control, persistence of wants or needs to
    smoke that deplete motivational resources, or
    events that precipitate acute wants, needs or
    impulses.

31
Relapse Late
  • Late relapse is most often a result of a failure
    of the new identity to achieve sufficient
    stability at all times to overpower the momentary
    motives to smoke
  • Over an extended period the chances of even a
    relatively modest motivation to smoke failing to
    provoke sufficient self-control is quite high
  • For some smokers, the wants and needs to smoke do
    not diminish sufficiently, either because of
    continued positive evaluations of smoking,
    attachment to a smoker identity, continued
    pharmacologically based needs, or a failure for
    the learned habit to weaken
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