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      Drug addiction: the neurobiology of behaviour gone awry.

      Nature reviews. Neuroscience
      Animals, Behavior, Addictive, metabolism, psychology, Brain, Humans, Substance-Related Disorders

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          Abstract

          Drug addiction manifests as a compulsive drive to take a drug despite serious adverse consequences. This aberrant behaviour has traditionally been viewed as bad "choices" that are made voluntarily by the addict. However, recent studies have shown that repeated drug use leads to long-lasting changes in the brain that undermine voluntary control. This, combined with new knowledge of how environmental, genetic and developmental factors contribute to addiction, should bring about changes in our approach to the prevention and treatment of addiction.

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          Most cited references49

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          The adolescent brain and age-related behavioral manifestations.

          L Spear (2000)
          To successfully negotiate the developmental transition between youth and adulthood, adolescents must maneuver this often stressful period while acquiring skills necessary for independence. Certain behavioral features, including age-related increases in social behavior and risk-taking/novelty-seeking, are common among adolescents of diverse mammalian species and may aid in this process. Reduced positive incentive values from stimuli may lead adolescents to pursue new appetitive reinforcers through drug use and other risk-taking behaviors, with their relative insensitivity to drugs supporting comparatively greater per occasion use. Pubertal increases in gonadal hormones are a hallmark of adolescence, although there is little evidence for a simple association of these hormones with behavioral change during adolescence. Prominent developmental transformations are seen in prefrontal cortex and limbic brain regions of adolescents across a variety of species, alterations that include an apparent shift in the balance between mesocortical and mesolimbic dopamine systems. Developmental changes in these stressor-sensitive regions, which are critical for attributing incentive salience to drugs and other stimuli, likely contribute to the unique characteristics of adolescence.
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            Drug Addiction and Its Underlying Neurobiological Basis: Neuroimaging Evidence for the Involvement of the Frontal Cortex

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              Addiction Is a Brain Disease, and It Matters

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                15550951
                10.1038/nrn1539

                Chemistry
                Animals,Behavior, Addictive,metabolism,psychology,Brain,Humans,Substance-Related Disorders
                Chemistry
                Animals, Behavior, Addictive, metabolism, psychology, Brain, Humans, Substance-Related Disorders

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