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Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: What is addiction?: Section A: Conceptions of addiction
The puzzle of addiction
Deriving addiction: an analysis based on three elementary features of making choices
The picoeconomics of addiction
Addiction as a disorder of self-control
Addiction: the belief oscillation hypothesis
Addiction and moral psychology
Identity and addiction
The harmful dysfunction analysis of addiction: normal brains and abnormal states of mind
The evolutionary significance of drug toxicity over reward
Section B: Varieties, taxonomies, and models of addiction: Defining addiction: a pragmatic perspective
Diagnosis of addictions
Reconsidering addiction as a syndrome: one disorder with multiple expressions
Developing general models and theories of addiction
Gambling disorder
Food addiction
"A walk on the wild side" of addiction: the history and significance of animal models
Part II: Explaining addiction: culture, pathways, mechanisms: Part II: Explaining addiction: culture, pathways, mechanisms: Section A: Anthropological, historical, and socio-psychological perspectives: Power and addiction
Sociology of addiction
The fuzzy boundaries of illegal drug markets and why they matter
Multiple commitments: heterogeneous histories of neuroscientific addiction research.
Section B: Developmental processes, vulnerabilities, and resilience: The epidemiological approach: an overview of methods and models
A genetic framework for addiction
Choice impulsivity: a drug-modifiable personality trait
Stress and addiction
Section C: Psychological and neural mechanisms: Mechanistic models for understanding addiction as a behavioural disorder
Controlled and automatic learning processes in addiction
Decision-making dysfunctions in addiction
The current status of the incentive sensitization theory of addiction
Resting-state and structural brain connectivity in individuals with stimulant addiction: a systematic review
Imaging dopamine signaling in addiction
The neurobiology of placebo effects
Brain mechanisms and the disease model of addiction: is it the whole story of the addicted self? a philosophical-skeptical perspective
Part III: Consequences, responses, and the meaning of addiction: Section A: Listening and relating to addicts: The outcasts project: humanizing heroin users through documentary photography and photo-elicitation
Our stories, our knowledge: the importance of addicts' epistemic authority in treatment
Reactive attitudes, relationships, and addiction
Section B: Prevention, treatment, and spontaneous recovery: Contingency management approaches
Twelve-step fellowship and recovery from addition
Opioid substitution treatment and harm minimization approaches
Self-change: genesis and functions of a concept
Section C: Ethics, law, and policy: Addiction: a structural problem of modern global society
Don't be fooled by the euphemistic language attesting to a gentler war on drugs
Drug legalization and public health: general issues, and the case of cannabis
Addiction and drug (de)criminalization
Criminal law and addiction
Addiction and mandatory treatment
Index.
Part I: What is addiction?: Section A: Conceptions of addiction
The puzzle of addiction
Deriving addiction: an analysis based on three elementary features of making choices
The picoeconomics of addiction
Addiction as a disorder of self-control
Addiction: the belief oscillation hypothesis
Addiction and moral psychology
Identity and addiction
The harmful dysfunction analysis of addiction: normal brains and abnormal states of mind
The evolutionary significance of drug toxicity over reward
Section B: Varieties, taxonomies, and models of addiction: Defining addiction: a pragmatic perspective
Diagnosis of addictions
Reconsidering addiction as a syndrome: one disorder with multiple expressions
Developing general models and theories of addiction
Gambling disorder
Food addiction
"A walk on the wild side" of addiction: the history and significance of animal models
Part II: Explaining addiction: culture, pathways, mechanisms: Part II: Explaining addiction: culture, pathways, mechanisms: Section A: Anthropological, historical, and socio-psychological perspectives: Power and addiction
Sociology of addiction
The fuzzy boundaries of illegal drug markets and why they matter
Multiple commitments: heterogeneous histories of neuroscientific addiction research.
Section B: Developmental processes, vulnerabilities, and resilience: The epidemiological approach: an overview of methods and models
A genetic framework for addiction
Choice impulsivity: a drug-modifiable personality trait
Stress and addiction
Section C: Psychological and neural mechanisms: Mechanistic models for understanding addiction as a behavioural disorder
Controlled and automatic learning processes in addiction
Decision-making dysfunctions in addiction
The current status of the incentive sensitization theory of addiction
Resting-state and structural brain connectivity in individuals with stimulant addiction: a systematic review
Imaging dopamine signaling in addiction
The neurobiology of placebo effects
Brain mechanisms and the disease model of addiction: is it the whole story of the addicted self? a philosophical-skeptical perspective
Part III: Consequences, responses, and the meaning of addiction: Section A: Listening and relating to addicts: The outcasts project: humanizing heroin users through documentary photography and photo-elicitation
Our stories, our knowledge: the importance of addicts' epistemic authority in treatment
Reactive attitudes, relationships, and addiction
Section B: Prevention, treatment, and spontaneous recovery: Contingency management approaches
Twelve-step fellowship and recovery from addition
Opioid substitution treatment and harm minimization approaches
Self-change: genesis and functions of a concept
Section C: Ethics, law, and policy: Addiction: a structural problem of modern global society
Don't be fooled by the euphemistic language attesting to a gentler war on drugs
Drug legalization and public health: general issues, and the case of cannabis
Addiction and drug (de)criminalization
Criminal law and addiction
Addiction and mandatory treatment
Index.