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Journal Article

Citation

Reyes-Huerta HE, dos Santos C, Martínez K. Med. Hypotheses 2018; 112: 27-29.

Affiliation

Autonomous University of Aguascalientes, Mexico.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.mehy.2018.01.007

PMID

29447931

Abstract

Impulsivity has been related to different features of addictive behaviors. Growing data, generated in separated lines of research, suggest that different processes underlying impulsivity are associated to relapse in alcohol drinking. Considering the evidence, relapse can be understood as an impulsive choice or as an impulsive action. In the first case, the return to drinking behavior is a consequence of insensitive to delayed consequence, that is, to the discounting of delayed rewards. In the second case, relapse is a consequence of failures to inhibit prepotent responses. Nevertheless, conditions that control the action of each mechanism or their interaction to influence relapse still unknown. We hypothesize that both mechanisms interact to produce relapse depending on framing effects, the moments of a drinking episode or context. The implication of the hypothesis is that relapse prevention strategies need to reduce discounting rate, but also to increase behavioral inhibition in the presence of cues related to alcohol.

Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Alcoholism; Behavioral inhibition; Delay discounting; Impulsivity; Relapse

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