Bornstein Aaron M, Pickard Hanna
Department of Cognitive Sciences, University of California, Irvine, CA, 92617, USA.
Center for the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, University of California, Irvine, CA, 92697, USA.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2020 May;45(6):907-915. doi: 10.1038/s41386-019-0594-2. Epub 2020 Jan 2.
Although vivid memories of drug experiences are prevalent within clinical contexts and addiction folklore ("chasing the first high"), little is known about the relevance of cognitive processes governing memory retrieval to substance use disorder. Drawing on recent work that identifies episodic memory's influence on decisions for reward, we propose a framework in which drug choices are biased by selective sampling of individual memories during two phases of addiction: (i) downward spiral into persistent use and (ii) relapse. Consideration of how memory retrieval influences the addiction process suggests novel treatment strategies. Rather than try to break learned associations between drug cues and drug rewards, treatment should aim to strengthen existing and/or create new associations between drug cues and drug-inconsistent rewards.
尽管在临床环境和成瘾传闻中(“追逐初次的快感”),对毒品体验的生动记忆很普遍,但关于控制记忆提取的认知过程与物质使用障碍之间的相关性却知之甚少。基于最近确定情景记忆对奖励决策有影响的研究,我们提出了一个框架,在成瘾的两个阶段中,药物选择会因对个体记忆的选择性抽样而产生偏差:(i)陷入持续使用的恶性循环,以及(ii)复发。考虑记忆提取如何影响成瘾过程,可提出新的治疗策略。治疗不应试图打破已习得的药物线索与药物奖励之间的关联,而应旨在加强现有的和/或建立药物线索与与药物不相关奖励之间的新关联。