Cannabis Indica

Personality theories of addiction are psychological models that associate personality traits or modes of thinking (i.e., affective states) with an individual's proclivity for developing an addiction. Models of addiction risk that have been proposed in psychology literature include an affect dysregulation model of positive and negative psychological affects, the reinforcement sensitivity theory model of impulsiveness and behavioral inhibition, and an impulsivity model of reward sensitization and impulsiveness.[1][5][6]

Role of affect dysregulation in addiction[edit]

Research has consistently shown strong associations between affective disorders and substance use disorders. Specifically, people with mood disorders are at increased risk of substance use disorders.[1] Affect and addiction can be related in a variety of ways as they play a crucial role in influencing motivated behaviours. For instance, affect facilitates action, directs attention, prepares the individual for a physical response, and guides behaviour to meet particular needs.[7] Moreover, affect is implicated in a range of concepts relevant to addiction: positive reinforcement, behaviour motivation, regulation of cognition and mood, and reasoning and decision making.[8][9] Emotion-motivated reasoning has been shown to influence addictive behaviours via selecting outcomes that minimize negative affective states while maximizing positive affective states.[10]

Negative affect[edit]

The relationship between negative affect and substance use disorders has been the most widely studied model of addiction. It proposes that individuals who experience the greatest levels of negative affect are at the greatest risk of using substances or behaviours as a coping (psychology) mechanism.[11][12] Here, substances and behaviours are used to improve mood and distract from unpleasant feelings. Once physical dependence has been established, substance abuse is primarily motivated by a desire to avoid negative affective states associated with withdrawal. Individuals high in affective mood disorders (anxiety) most commonly report high levels of negative affect associated with cravings.[13][14][15] The relationship between negative affect and addiction is not unidirectional. That is, while positive affect increases the likelihood of initiation of substance use, the negative affective states produced by withdrawal are the most commonly reported factors for continued use.[1]

Key to this concept is the Hedonic Hypothesis, which states that individuals initiate use of the substance or behaviour for their pleasurable effects, but then take it compulsively to avoid withdrawal symptoms, resulting in dependence.[16] Based on this hypothesis, some researchers believe that individuals engaging in risky use of substances or behaviours may be over-responding to negative stimuli, which leads to addiction.

Negative affect has also been a powerful predictor in terms of vulnerability to addiction in adolescents. High-risk adolescents have been found to be highly reactive to negative stimuli, which increases their motivation to engage in substance use following a negative emotion-arousing situation.[17] Moreover, it has been established that adolescents high in negative affect are at increased risk for moving from recreational use to problematic use despite a family history of addiction.[17]

Furthermore, the trait negative urgency, the propensity to engage in risky behaviour in response to distress, is highly predictive of certain aspects of substance abuse in adolescents.[18] Early individual differences in emotional differences in reactivity and regulation underlie the later emergence of the trait 'negative urgency'.[19]

Positive affect[edit]

Unlike negative affect, positive affect is related to addiction in both high and low forms. For example, individuals high in positive affect are more likely to engage in risky behaviour, such as drug use. Individuals with high positive affect in response to use are more likely to seek out substances for hedonic reasons. Conversely, low positive affect may prompt initial use due to lack of responsiveness to natural rewards.[1]

Extensive personality research has been done that links positive emotional states to individual differences in risky behaviour.[1] The trait 'positive urgency', defined as the tendency to engage in risky behaviour under conditions of extreme positive affect, is predictive of substance or behavioural problems that lead to addiction.[20] This trait represents an underlying dysregulation in response to extreme affective states and has a direct impact on behaviour. The trait 'positive urgency' has been shown to have a predictive relationship with increases in drinking quantity and alcohol-related problems in college, as well as drug use in college.[18][21] Furthermore, this trait provides important information on how positive affect can increase the likelihood of engaging in substance abuse.

Another important factor to consider is the individual differences in the experience of pleasurable effects brought on by the substance or behaviour. It is reasoned that certain individuals may be more sensitive to the pleasurable effects and thus experience them with greater intensity, resulting in addiction.[1] For example, over-responsiveness to substance affects has been found in cocaine addicts – an increased response to methylphenidate in the brain regions associated with emotional reactivity and mood.[22][23][24] Thus, strong emotional responses that addicted individuals show in response to substances or behaviours might be results of enhanced sensitivity to their effects.

Individuals differ in the way by which they metabolize substances, such as alcohol; these positive reinforcing effects are partly predetermined.[1] Individual reactivity to the effects of substances may affect motivation to use. For example, if a person experiences strong positive (and weak negative) effects from a substance, due to their biochemical profile, their expectations of the positive effects from the substance will be heightened, therefore increasing their desire for continued use, resulting in dependence.[1] According to this model, the experience of the positive mood enhances implicit attention to substance cues and implicit associations between reward and substance use.[25]

Many addicts report symptoms of anhedonia (i.e., the inability to experience pleasure).[26] Results of chronic deviation of the brain's reward set point, which follow a prolonged intoxication, diminish responsiveness to natural positive stimuli. This may result in an over-responsiveness to substance-related cues, coupled with an impaired capacity to initiate behaviours in response to natural rewards.[27] Thus, low positive affect inhibits the individual's ability to replace drug-taking with other rewarding activities. It has also been proposed that during substance dependence the somatic states that guide decision-making are weakened in relation to natural rewards, while at the same time they enhance the emotional response to drug-related stimuli.[28]

Compulsive behaviours characterized by addiction are underpinned by two interacting systems:

  1. impulsivity; responsible for the rapid signalling of the affective importance of a stimuli
  2. reflection; cognitively evaluates the signal before altering the behavioural response.

Dysfunction in impulsivity exaggerates the emotional impact of the drug-related stimuli and attenuates the impact of natural reinforcement.[1] Dysregulation in reflection results in the inability to override impulsivity, thus resulting in addiction.[1] Under-responsiveness to naturally occurring positive stimuli is a crucial element that biases the individual towards the use of substances or behaviours and away from non-drug alternatives.

Effortful control[edit]

Temperamental effortful control is defined as the ability to suppress a dominant response in order to perform a subdominant response.[29] In other words, it is the degree of control the individual has over impulses and emotions, which includes the ability to focus or shift attention. Temperamental effortful control can influence addiction in a number of ways.

Low levels of effortful control can render the individual less able to distract themselves from unpleasant feelings or overcome strong affective impulses, resulting in maladaptive responses to distress – such as continued substance use.[1] Low effortful control may also interact with negative and positive affect, predisposing individuals to substance or behavioural use, and impair their ability to control use.[1]

A general inability to control affective states may impair the conditioning of behaviour associated with rewards and punishment, may increase susceptibility to biasing by substance-related cues, and could tax self-regulatory capacity.[1] Such conditions may render individuals unable to interrupt automatic drug-seeking behaviours. Abnormal levels of positive and negative affect can be increased by low effortful control.[30][31] For example, high positive affect may interact with low effortful control in increasing risk of addiction amongst vulnerable populations.

Gray's reinforcement sensitivity theory[edit]

Gray's reinforcement sensitivity theory (RST) consists of two motivational systems: the behaviour inhibition system (BIS) and the behaviour activation system (BAS).[32][33] The BIS is responsible for organizing behaviour in response to adverse stimuli. In other words, stimuli associated with punishment or the omission/termination of reward, are believed to underlie anxiety. The purpose of the BIS is to initiate behaviour inhibition, or interrupt ongoing behaviour, while the BAS is sensitive to stimuli that signal reward and/or relief from punishment (impulsivity).[32][33] In accordance with the RST, an association was found between people with extreme scores in BIS/BAS and adjustment problems. BIS and BAS reactivity correspond with individual trait differences in positive affect and negative affect – The BAS is associated with trait impulsivity and positive affect, while the BIS is associated with trait negative affect.[34][35] For instance, it has been postulated that high BIS is related to anxiety, while high BAS is related to conduct disorders or impulsivity.[33][36]

According to this model, substance abuse problems may arise under two different personality traits: low BIS and high BAS. Since the BAS promotes the individual to pursue actions that may result in reward, BAS sensitivity is involved in the initiation of addiction. Significant associations have been found between high BAS such as alcohol misuse in school girls, hazardous drinking in men, illicit drug abuse, and tobacco use. BAS sensitivity is a significant predictor of reactivity to substance cues, or cravings.[5][37][38][39][40][41] Conversely, BIS sensitivity is involved in avoiding negative situations or affect (such as withdrawal). Low BIS has been positively associated with continuing the addiction to relieve feelings of withdrawal, or for continued use to alleviate negative affect.

Model of impulsivity[edit]

The model of impulsivity states that individuals high in impulsivity are at greater risk of addictive behaviours. The model proposes a two dimensional trait characteristic for the initiation and continuation of substance/behavioural abuse:

  • Reward Drive (RD) – reflects individual differences in sensitivities to incentive motivation and engagement of addictive behaviour when reward cues are detected.[6]
  • Rash Impulsiveness (RI) – reflecting individual differences in the ability to modify the addictive behaviour due to negative consequences.[6] Individuals high in RI are oblivious or insensitive to the negative consequences as a result of addictive behaviour when engagement is craved.

Both high RD and RI individuals are found to have difficulty in making decisions that have future consequences. Individuals high in RD experience greater reinforcement when initially engaging in the addictive behaviour, and experience stronger conditioned associations with continued use. Individuals high in RI experience greater difficulty resisting cravings even in the face of negative consequences.[6] Some moderators of RD and RI on the severity of addiction are stress and negative affect (such as feeling depressed).[42] That is, individuals high in RD/RI who also experience high levels of negative affect or stress, present more severe addictive behaviours. For example, if an individual is experiencing emotional distress, the distress experienced may lessen impulse control if they believe that engaging in addictive behaviour will decrease negative affect. According to this model, adolescents who are high in RI are at greater risk for developing addictions. Low RI has been shown to moderate some of the risk of addiction due to family history.[43][44][45][46] High RI for individual without a family history of addiction has been related to poor decision-making.

Five factor model[edit]

The five factors are:

Data analysis demonstrated that higher scores for N and O, and lower scores for C and A, lead to increased risk of drug use.[47][48] Users of different drugs have different five factor personality profiles.[49] For example, Users of amphetamines, benzodiazepines, cannabis, cocaine, crack, heroin, legal highs, and nicotine belong to the type N, C (Insecures) and do not belong to the type E, C (Impulsives, Hedonists). On the contrary, users of ecstasy and LSD belong to the type E, C and do not belong to the type N, C. Detailed comparison of ecstasy and heroin users demonstrates that they are significantly different.[48] Heroin users have higher N, and lower E and A. Very low A score is typical for Volatile substance abuse.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cheetham A, Allen NB, Yücel M, Lubman DI (August 2010). "The role of affective dysregulation in drug addiction". Clin Psychol Rev. 30 (6): 621–34. doi:10.1016/j.cpr.2010.04.005. PMID 20546986.
  2. ^ Franken IH, Muris P (2006). "BIS/BAS personality characteristics and college students' substance use". Personality and Individual Differences. 40 (7): 1497–1503. doi:10.1016/j.paid.2005.12.005.
  3. ^ Genovese JE, Wallace D (December 2007). "Reward sensitivity and substance abuse in middle school and high school students". J Genet Psychol. 168 (4): 465–9. doi:10.3200/GNTP.168.4.465-469. PMID 18232522. S2CID 207640075.
  4. ^ Kimbrel NA, Nelson-Gray RO, Mitchell JT (April 2007). "Reinforcement sensitivity and maternal style as predictors of psychopathology". Personality and Individual Differences. 42 (6): 1139–1149. doi:10.1016/j.paid.2006.06.028.
  5. ^ a b [2][3][4]
  6. ^ a b c d Dawe S, Loxton NJ (May 2004). "The role of impulsivity in the development of substance use and eating disorders". Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 28 (3): 343–51. doi:10.1016/j.neubiorev.2004.03.007. PMID 15225976. S2CID 24435589.
  7. ^ Gross JJ (September 1998). "The emerging field of emotion regulation: An integrative review". Review of General Psychology. 2 (3): 271–299. doi:10.1037/1089-2680.2.3.271. S2CID 6236938.
  8. ^ Bechara A, Damasio H (2002). "Decision-making and addiction (part I): impaired activation of somatic states in substance dependent individuals when pondering decisions with negative future consequences". Neuropsychologia. 40 (10): 1675–89. doi:10.1016/S0028-3932(02)00015-5. PMID 11992656. S2CID 17199186.
  9. ^ Quirk SW (May 2009). "Emotion concepts in models of substance abuse". Drug and Alcohol Review. 20 (1): 95–104. doi:10.1080/09595230125185.
  10. ^ Westen D, Blagov PS, Harenski K, Kilts C, Hamann S (November 2006). "Neural bases of motivated reasoning: an FMRI study of emotional constraints on partisan political judgment in the 2004 U.S. Presidential election". J Cogn Neurosci. 18 (11): 1947–58. doi:10.1162/jocn.2006.18.11.1947. PMID 17069484. S2CID 8625992.
  11. ^ McCollam JB, Burish TG, Maisto SA, Sobell MB (April 1980). "Alcohol's effects on physiological arousal and self-reported affect and sensations". J Abnorm Psychol. 89 (2): 224–33. doi:10.1037/0021-843X.89.2.224. PMID 7365134.
  12. ^ Measelle JR, Stice E, Springer DW (September 2006). "A prospective test of the negative affect model of substance abuse: moderating effects of social support". Psychol Addict Behav. 20 (3): 225–33. doi:10.1037/0893-164X.20.3.225. PMC 1560098. PMID 16938060.
  13. ^ Childress AR, Ehrman R, McLellan AT, MacRae J, Natale M, O'Brien CP (1994). "Can induced moods trigger drug-related responses in opiate abuse patients?". J Subst Abuse Treat. 11 (1): 17–23. doi:10.1016/0740-5472(94)90060-4. PMID 8201629.
  14. ^ Cooney NL, Litt MD, Morse PA, Bauer LO, Gaupp L (May 1997). "Alcohol cue reactivity, negative-mood reactivity, and relapse in treated alcoholic men". J Abnorm Psychol. 106 (2): 243–50. doi:10.1037/0021-843X.106.2.243. PMID 9131844.
  15. ^ Fox HC, Bergquist KL, Hong KI, Sinha R (March 2007). "Stress-induced and alcohol cue-induced craving in recently abstinent alcohol-dependent individuals". Alcohol. Clin. Exp. Res. 31 (3): 395–403. doi:10.1111/j.1530-0277.2006.00320.x. PMID 17295723.
  16. ^ Robinson TE, Berridge KC (2003). "Addiction". Annu Rev Psychol. 54: 25–53. doi:10.1146/annurev.psych.54.101601.145237. PMID 12185211.
  17. ^ a b Randall DM, Cox WM (February 2001). "Experimental mood inductions in persons at high and low risk for alcohol problems". Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse. 27 (1): 183–7. doi:10.1081/ADA-100103126. PMID 11373034. S2CID 5764034.
  18. ^ a b Cyders MA, Smith GT, Spillane NS, Fischer S, Annus AM, Peterson C (March 2007). "Integration of impulsivity and positive mood to predict risky behavior: development and validation of a measure of positive urgency". Psychol Assess. 19 (1): 107–18. doi:10.1037/1040-3590.19.1.107. PMID 17371126.
  19. ^ Whiteside SP, Lynam DR (March 2001). "The Five Factor Model and impulsivity: using a structural model of personality to understand impulsivity". Personality and Individual Differences. 30 (4): 669–689. doi:10.1016/S0191-8869(00)00064-7.
  20. ^ Cyders MA, Smith GT (November 2008). "Emotion-based dispositions to rash action: positive and negative urgency". Psychol Bull. 134 (6): 807–28. doi:10.1037/a0013341. PMC 2705930. PMID 18954158.
  21. ^ Zapolski TC, Cyders MA, Smith GT (June 2009). "Positive urgency predicts illegal drug use and risky sexual behavior". Psychol Addict Behav. 23 (2): 348–54. doi:10.1037/a0014684. PMC 2709762. PMID 19586152.
  22. ^ Volkow ND, Wang GJ, Fowler JS, Logan J, Gatley SJ, Gifford A, Hitzemann R, Ding YS, Pappas N (September 1999). "Prediction of reinforcing responses to psychostimulants in humans by brain dopamine D2 receptor levels". Am J Psychiatry. 156 (9): 1440–3. doi:10.1176/ajp.156.9.1440. PMID 10484959. S2CID 17776027.
  23. ^ Volkow ND (November 2004). "The reality of comorbidity: depression and drug abuse". Biol. Psychiatry. 56 (10): 714–7. doi:10.1016/j.biopsych.2004.07.007. PMID 15556111. S2CID 32810395.
  24. ^ Volkow ND, Wang GJ, Ma Y, Fowler JS, Wong C, Ding YS, Hitzemann R, Swanson JM, Kalivas P (April 2005). "Activation of orbital and medial prefrontal cortex by methylphenidate in cocaine-addicted subjects but not in controls: relevance to addiction". J. Neurosci. 25 (15): 3932–9. doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0433-05.2005. PMC 6724925. PMID 15829645.
  25. ^ Cox WM, Klinger E (May 1988). "A motivational model of alcohol use". J Abnorm Psychol. 97 (2): 168–80. doi:10.1037/0021-843X.97.2.168. PMID 3290306.
  26. ^ Janiri L, Martinotti G, Dario T, Reina D, Paparello F, Pozzi G, Addolorato G, Di Giannantonio M, De Risio S (2005). "Anhedonia and substance-related symptoms in detoxified substance-dependent subjects: a correlation study". Neuropsychobiology. 52 (1): 37–44. doi:10.1159/000086176. PMID 15942262. S2CID 22464794.
  27. ^ Koob GF, Le Moal M (October 1997). "Drug abuse: hedonic homeostatic dysregulation". Science. 278 (5335): 52–8. doi:10.1126/science.278.5335.52. PMID 9311926.
  28. ^ Bechara A (2003). "Risky business: emotion, decision-making, and addiction". J Gambl Stud. 19 (1): 23–51. doi:10.1023/A:1021223113233. PMID 12635539. S2CID 18775801.
  29. ^ Rothbart MK, Ellis LK, Rueda MR, Posner MI (December 2003). "Developing mechanisms of temperamental effortful control". J Pers. 71 (6): 1113–43. doi:10.1111/1467-6494.7106009. PMID 14633060.
  30. ^ Colder CR, Chassin L (June 1997). "Affectivity and impulsivity: Temperament risk for adolescent alcohol involvement". Psychology of Addictive Behaviors. 11 (2): 83–97. doi:10.1037/0893-164X.11.2.83.
  31. ^ Hussong AM, Chassin L (November 1994). "The stress-negative affect model of adolescent alcohol use: disaggregating negative affect". J. Stud. Alcohol. 55 (6): 707–18. doi:10.15288/jsa.1994.55.707. PMID 7861800.
  32. ^ a b Gray JA (August 1970). "The psychophysiological basis of introversion-extraversion". Behav Res Ther. 8 (3): 249–66. doi:10.1016/0005-7967(70)90069-0. PMID 5470377.
  33. ^ a b c McNaughton N, Gray, JA (2000). The neuropsychology of anxiety: an enquiry into the function of the septo-hippocampal system. Oxford [Oxfordshire]: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-852270-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  34. ^ Campbell-Sills L, Liverant GI, Brown TA (September 2004). "Psychometric evaluation of the behavioral inhibition/behavioral activation scales in a large sample of outpatients with anxiety and mood disorders". Psychol Assess. 16 (3): 244–54. doi:10.1037/1040-3590.16.3.244. PMID 15456380.
  35. ^ Jorm AR, Christensen H, Henderson AS, Jacomb PA, Korten AE, Rodgers B (January 1998). "Using the BIS/BAS scales to measure behavioural inhibition and behavioural activation: Factor structure, validity and norms in a large community sample". Personality and Individual Differences. 26 (1): 49–58. doi:10.1016/S0191-8869(98)00143-3.
  36. ^ Quay HC (February 1997). "Inhibition and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder". J Abnorm Child Psychol. 25 (1): 7–13. doi:10.1023/A:1025799122529. PMID 9093895. S2CID 324733.
  37. ^ Knyazev GG (September 2004). "Behavioural activation as predictor of substance use: mediating and moderating role of attitudes and social relationships". Drug Alcohol Depend. 75 (3): 309–21. doi:10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2004.03.007. PMID 15283952.
  38. ^ Loxton NJ, Dawe S (November 2006). "Reward and punishment sensitivity in dysfunctional eating and hazardous drinking women: associations with family risk". Appetite. 47 (3): 361–71. doi:10.1016/j.appet.2006.05.014. PMID 16846665. S2CID 39352218.
  39. ^ Loxton NJ, Dawe S (April 2007). "How do dysfunctional eating and hazardous drinking women perform on behavioural measures of reward and punishment sensitivity?". Personality and Individual Differences. 42 (6): 1163–1172. doi:10.1016/j.paid.2006.09.031.
  40. ^ O’Connor RM, Stewart SH, Watt MC (March 2009). "Distinguishing BAS risk for university students' drinking, smoking, and gambling behaviors". Personality and Individual Differences. 46 (4): 514–519. doi:10.1016/j.paid.2008.12.002.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  41. ^ Pardo Y, Aguilar R, Molinuevo B, Torrubia R (October 2007). "Alcohol use as a behavioural sign of disinhibition: evidence from J.A. Gray's model of personality". Addict Behav. 32 (10): 2398–403. doi:10.1016/j.addbeh.2007.02.010. PMID 17407802.
  42. ^ Koob GF, Le Moal M (February 2001). "Drug addiction, dysregulation of reward, and allostasis". Neuropsychopharmacology. 24 (2): 97–129. doi:10.1016/S0893-133X(00)00195-0. PMID 11120394. S2CID 3993014.
  43. ^ Brook JS, Kessler RC, Cohen P (1999). "The onset of marijuana use from preadolescence and early adolescence to young adulthood". Dev. Psychopathol. 11 (4): 901–14. doi:10.1017/S0954579499002370. PMID 10624731. S2CID 38337035.
  44. ^ Lynskey MT, Fergusson DM, Horwood LJ (October 1998). "The origins of the correlations between tobacco, alcohol, and cannabis use during adolescence". J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 39 (7): 995–1005. doi:10.1111/1469-7610.00402. PMID 9804032.
  45. ^ King KM, Chassin L (September 2004). "Mediating and moderated effects of adolescent behavioral undercontrol and parenting in the prediction of drug use disorders in emerging adulthood". Psychol Addict Behav. 18 (3): 239–49. doi:10.1037/0893-164X.18.3.239. PMID 15482079.
  46. ^ Tarter RE, Kirisci L, Habeych M, Reynolds M, Vanyukov M (February 2004). "Neurobehavior disinhibition in childhood predisposes boys to substance use disorder by young adulthood: direct and mediated etiologic pathways". Drug Alcohol Depend. 73 (2): 121–32. doi:10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2003.07.004. PMID 14725951.
  47. ^ Belcher, Annabelle M.; Volkow, Nora D.; Moeller, F. Gerard; Ferré, Sergi (2014). "Personality traits and vulnerability or resilience to substance use disorders". Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 18 (4): 211–217. doi:10.1016/j.tics.2014.01.010. PMC 3972619. PMID 24612993.
  48. ^ a b Fehrman, Elaine; Egan, Vincent; Gorban, Alexander N.; Levesley, Jeremy; Mirkes, Evgeny M.; Muhammad, Awaz K. (2019). Personality Traits and Drug Consumption. A Story Told by Data. Springer, Cham. arXiv:2001.06520. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-10442-9. ISBN 978-3-030-10441-2. S2CID 151160405.
  49. ^ Appendix: Main Tables. Psychological Profiles of Drug Users and Non-users in book of Fehrman et al.

Leave a Reply