A Comparison of Drug Conditioning and Craving for Alcohol and Cocaine
- 1 January 1992
- book chapter
- Published by Springer Nature
- Vol. 10, 147-164
- https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-1648-8_8
Abstract
Craving is a potentially important concept that is difficult to define and study in the laboratory. Although alcohol and cocaine are very different pharmacologically, this discussion emphasizes common factors in addiction to these drugs, such as the tendency of alcoholics and cocaine abusers to crave these substances. I review commonalities in drug conditioning and cue reactivity to alcohol and cocaine. Both drugs support Pavlovian conditioning when they are presented as unconditioned stimuli, whether studied in rodents or humans. In addition, both drugs are craved when abusers are presented with stimuli associated with these drugs. Finally, I propose a theoretical definition of craving based on autoshaping and sign-tracking phenomena that suggests a common mechanism of addiction to these drugs. This model defines craving as a reflection of sign tracking to internal and external stimuli that have in the past reliably predicted presentation of these drugs.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- The skin-flushing response: Autonomic, self-report, and conditioned responses to repeated administrations of alcohol in Asian men.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1989
- Acquisition and extinction of an alcohol-opposite conditioned response in humansPsychopharmacology, 1989
- Placebo Responding in the Same Direction as Alcohol in WomenAlcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 1989
- Cocaine and Other StimulantsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1988
- The Effect of Diazepam Sedation on Cerebral Glucose Metabolism in Alzheimer's Disease as Measured Using Positron Emission TomographyJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1987
- Alcohol Expectancy and Conditioning in Sons of AlcoholicsAdvances in Alcohol & Substance Abuse, 1987
- Positron emission tomography assessment of effects of benzodiazepines on regional glucose metabolic rate in patients with anxiety disorderLife Sciences, 1987
- Pimozide blocks establishment but not expression of cocaine-produced environment-specific conditioningLife Sciences, 1986
- Drug-environment interaction: Context dependency of cocaine-induced behavioral sensitizationLife Sciences, 1981
- Evidence from rats that morphine tolerance is a learned response.Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 1975