PrintREWARD AND ADDICTION

Addiction is a state in which an organism engaged in a compulsive behavior which is reinforced or rewarded, even when faced with negative consequences.

A distinction is generally made between “reward” and “addiction”. “Reward” is defined as a biological mechanism mediating behavior motivated by events commonly associated with pleasure. Reward and motivation can be considered as natural components of normal behavior. Indeed, reward pathways clearly serve to direct behavior towards goals that are beneficial to the organism or species survival, e.g., food and water intake, reproductive activities… However, a pleasurable substance can conduce to “addiction”, inducing a compulsive behavior of substance-seeking and intake, a loss of control of limiting intake and the emergence of a negative emotional state when access to the substance is prevented. A variety of substances are susceptible to provoke addiction, such as alcohol, illicit drugs, nicotine, among others…
In a mechanistic point of view, drug addiction is a chronic, relapsing disease that is induced by disturbances in the neurobiological mechanisms of brain function. The use of substances for recreational purposes is based on the fact that they cause rewarding effects through the pleasure center in the brain, mainly represented by the mesocorticolimbic dopaminergic pathways. [more]

EXPERIMENTAL TESTS
Locomotor response to Novelty
Conditioned place preference
Self-administration
Food-motivated operant conditioning

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