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4.1C Addiction Literature & Lecture Summary

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4.1C Addiction Literature & Lecture Summary for International Master of Psychology Clinical track I got 9.2 from the exam, new summary made for the new curriculum ()

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October 27, 2025
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Week 1 Introduction and the typical course of Addiction
Lectures
Ingmar Franken: What is addiction: an introduction
➔​ Over 3 million annual deaths due to alcohol and drug use
➔​ Lifetime prevalence of any substance use in the NL— 19.1%
➔​ Higher prevalence of male users in majority of substances
➔​ Social relevance
◆​ Impact on health— health care burden
◆​ Crime– more than 50% of crimes are substance related
◆​ Public safety— driving
◆​ Impact on productivity at work


DSM-5 Diagnostic Criteria: Substance (e.g., Alcohol) Use Disorder

A problematic pattern of alcohol use leading to clinically significant impairment or distress, as
manifested by 2 of the 11 following symptoms, occurring within a 12-month period:

●​ Alcohol (or the substance in question) is often taken in larger amounts or over a longer
period than was intended.
●​ There is a persistent desire or unsuccessful efforts to cut down or control alcohol use.
●​ A great deal of time is spent in activities necessary to obtain alcohol, use alcohol, or
recover from its effects.
●​ Craving, or a strong desire or urge to use alcohol.
●​ Recurrent alcohol use resulting in a failure to fulfill major role obligations at work,
school, or home.
●​ Continued alcohol use despite having persistent or recurrent social or interpersonal
problems caused or exacerbated by the effects of alcohol.
●​ Important social, occupational, or recreational activities are given up or reduced
because of alcohol use.
●​ Recurrent alcohol use in situations in which it is physically hazardous.
●​ Alcohol use is continued despite knowledge of having a persistent or recurrent physical
or psychological problem that is likely to have been caused or exacerbated by alcohol.
●​ Tolerance, as defined by either of the following:
○​ A need for markedly increased amounts of alcohol to achieve intoxication or
desired effect.
○​ A markedly diminished effect with continued use of the same amount of alcohol.
●​ Withdrawal, as manifested by either of the following:
○​ The characteristic withdrawal syndrome for alcohol.
○​ Alcohol (or a closely related substance, such as a benzodiazepine) is taken to
relieve or avoid withdrawal symptoms.

, ➔​ Types of substances
◆​ Tobacco
◆​ Stimulants– cosine, amphetamines, XTC
◆​ Depressants— alcohol, benzodiazepines
◆​ Opioids— heroin, morphine
◆​ Hallucinogens— LSD, cannabis, ketamine


➔​ Drugs and neurotransmitters
◆​ Agonists: Certain drugs can mimic the effects of neurotransmitters by binding to
the same receptor site as the endogenous transmitter & producing the same
functional response
◆​ Antagonists: bind to the same receptor site as neurotransmitters, but, instead of
initiating the chain of events, they block the response
◆​ Cocaine
●​ Dopamine agonist
●​ Inhibits reuptake of dopamine
◆​ MDMA
●​ Serotonin agonist
●​ Increases serotonin and dopamine levels in the synaptic cleft
●​ Increased release & reduced reuptake
◆​ Alcohol
●​ Gaba agonist
●​ Nmda antagonist
●​ Opioid agonist
●​ Serotonin agonist



Nora de Bode: Social and cultural aspects of Addiction


➔​ Neurocognitive profile of addiction
◆​ Imbalance between the approach-oriented motivation system and regulatory
control system
●​ Reduced cognitive control (-)
●​ Increased motivation— craving, attentional biases (++)
◆​ The environment plays an important role in these processes


➔​ Social and cultural factors
◆​ Social factors
●​ one’s immediate environments: peers, family, friends, social norms

, ●​ Social environment affects the likelihood that someone will use drugs
●​ Social influence affects most of our behavior
●​ Age: adolescents are more likely to be affected by social influence
●​ Peer group: the peer group and acceptance of peer pressure within this
group
●​ Individual differences: people differ in the extent to which they are likely
to adapt their behavior
●​ Social attunement: tendency to harmonize one’s social behavior with the
environment




●​ Social norms: expectations or rules that are socially reinforced
○​ Injunctive norms: how you think people feel about certain
behaviors— e.g. Don’t use drugs
◆​ How much injunctive norms affect our behavior differs by
person
○​ Descriptive norms: how people actually behave– e.g. whether
people actually use drugs or not
◆​ Has a lot of influence on our behavior, and drug use
◆​ Can influence the way we see perceived harm and
perceived benefit of drug use
◆​ E.g. Everyone uses drugs, so it must be fine!


◆​ Results from a drug use study on NL college students
●​ Risk perceptions & attitudes affected drug usage
●​ Students overestimated general usage in the NL
●​ overestimation of the usage of one substance was a reflection of one’s
own use
◆​ Cultural factors
●​ more widespread shared beliefs and values: legislations, language,
history, religion, local traditions
●​ Legislations
○​ Whether a substance is legal or illegal affects SUD severity, and
also how your social environment views your drug use

, ○​ Legislation leads to normalization— alcohol, tobacco, cannabis in
some places
●​ cultural factors can affect brain processes, and isn’t always seen on the
behavioral level
●​ Study comparing attitudes of cannabis use disorder individuals in NL vs
Texas




○​ Legislation does not always match attitudes
○​ Personal attitudes are more associated with the heaviness of
use, whereas legislation is more associated with addiction
severity
○​ Attitudes may affect brain processes underlying addiction
○​ Texan users overall reported more positive beliefs, as well as
friends and family
○​ Less positive beliefs moderated the association between grams
consumed per week and working memory functioning


Literature
Week 1: Introduction and the typical course of addiction
The history of addiction concepts: from ‘addiction’ to ‘addictions’


➔​ It has been known for centuries that certain substances had psychoactive effects, were
not always beneficial or cause issues for the users and the others
➔​ Different terms have been used to describe long-term, compulsive and damaging
substance use

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