Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06511, USA.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2013 Jun;27(2):366-79. doi: 10.1037/a0028490. Epub 2012 May 28.
Humans suffer heavily from substance use disorders and other addictions. Despite much effort that has been put into understanding the mechanisms of the addictive process, treatment strategies have remained suboptimal over the past several decades. Mindfulness training, which is based on ancient Buddhist models of human suffering, has recently shown preliminary efficacy in treating addictions. These early models show remarkable similarity to current models of the addictive process, especially in their overlap with operant conditioning (positive and negative reinforcement). Further, they may provide explanatory power for the mechanisms of mindfulness training, including its effects on core addictive elements, such as craving, and the underlying neurobiological processes that may be active therein. In this review, using smoking as an example, we will highlight similarities between ancient and modern views of the addictive process, review studies of mindfulness training for addictions and their effects on craving and other components of this process, and discuss recent neuroimaging findings that may inform our understanding of the neural mechanisms of mindfulness training.
人类深受物质使用障碍和其他成瘾问题的困扰。尽管人们在理解成瘾过程的机制方面付出了大量努力,但在过去几十年中,治疗策略一直不尽如人意。基于古老的佛教人类痛苦模型的正念训练最近在治疗成瘾方面显示出初步疗效。这些早期模型与当前的成瘾过程模型非常相似,尤其是在与操作性条件反射(正强化和负强化)的重叠方面。此外,它们可能为正念训练的机制提供解释力,包括其对核心成瘾因素(如渴望)的影响,以及可能在其中起作用的潜在神经生物学过程。在这篇综述中,我们将以吸烟为例,强调成瘾过程的古代和现代观点之间的相似之处,回顾正念训练治疗成瘾及其对渴望和该过程其他成分的影响的研究,并讨论最近的神经影像学发现,这些发现可能有助于我们理解正念训练的神经机制。