THE ADDICTIVE BRAIN - Welcome to the OLLI at UCI Blog · 2017. 1. 31. · THE ADDICTIVE BRAIN SC...

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THE ADDICTIVE BRAIN

SC 212 JANUARY 31, 2017

JOHN BUSH

BEHAVIORAL ADDICTIONS

• Definition: Persistent continuation of a problem behavior despite significant negative consequences

• Any activity that hyperstimulates the brain reward circuit may lead to addiction

• Candidate behavioral addictions – Problem gambling --Food bingeing (Obesity) – Video gaming --Internet gaming – Aerobic physical exercise --Working – Shopping --Viewing pornography – Cell phone abuse --On-line sexting – Sexual intercourse

DVD LECTURE ELEVEN

THE GAMBLER’S BRAIN

DVD LECTURE TWELVE

JUNK FOOD, PORN, VIDEO GAMES – ADDICTIONS?

• BREAK

GAMBLING: A SUMMARY

• Gambling: putting something of value at risk in the expectation of gaining greater value

• Pathological gambling and drug addiction share a number of similarities – fMRI evidence for enhanced response of pathological

gamblers to gambling cues – Dopamine is involved: dopamine agonists increase

likelihood of pathological gambling – Control by prefrontal cortex is reduced among

pathological gamblers – Pathological gambling is more than 62% heritable

COMPONENTS OF THE REWARD SYSTEM

NEUROTRANSMITTERS

Dopamine

Glutamate

GABA

Serotonin

Acetylcholine

Δ FosB: SIGN OF ADDICTION

• Formation of ΔFosB leads to long term changes in the brain

• The more prolonged and intense the exposure to a problem behavior the greater the concentration of ΔFosB in the brain

• ΔFosB concentration decreases relatively slowly with time

• ΔFosB can be detected in human addicts in a post mortem examination

EVIDENCE OF BEHAVIORAL ADDICTION

• Observation of behavior patterns • Response to pharmaceutical interventions • Detection of ΔFosB • Functional MRI • Positron emission tomography • Addiction transfer

CANDIDATE BEHAVIORAL ADDICTIONS

• Problem gambling • Video gaming • Internet gaming • Cell phone abuse • Aerobic physical exercise * • Compulsive working • Food bingeing (Obesity)* • Compulsive shopping • Hypersexuality* • Viewing pornography

CAN OTHER NATURAL PLEASURES HYPERSTIMULATE THE REWARD CIRCUIT?

• Aesthetic stimuli • Social stimuli • Religious stimuli

RELIGIOUS JOY

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Areas associated with the brain's reward circuit, in particular the nucleus accumbens, were activated when devout study participants felt religious joy. 

SOME FINAL THOUGHTS • Addictive Behavior: compulsive continuation

of a behavior despite truly negative consequences

• Some people are genetically more susceptible to addiction than others

• There is literally something physically and chemically different in the brains of addicts