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From Intoxication to Addiction: Neurobiological Substrates for Hubris?

The Intoxication of Power: From Neurosciences to Hubris in Healthcare and Public Life. Royal Society of Medicine October 2012. From Intoxication to Addiction: Neurobiological Substrates for Hubris?. Paul Fletcher pcf22@cam.ac.uk. Bernard Wolfe Health Neuroscience Fund.

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From Intoxication to Addiction: Neurobiological Substrates for Hubris?

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  1. The Intoxication of Power: From Neurosciences to Hubris in Healthcare and Public Life. Royal Society of Medicine October 2012 From Intoxication to Addiction: Neurobiological Substrates for Hubris? Paul Fletcher pcf22@cam.ac.uk Bernard Wolfe Health Neuroscience Fund

  2. Speculations on the neurobiology of hubris syndrome • Impaired risk appraisal • Inability to foresee undesirable outcomes • Dangerous decision-making (with ensuing harm). Highly unlikely to be localisable to a single region or neurotransmitter system

  3. From Intoxication to Addiction: Neurobiological Substrates for Hubris?

  4. What do we mean by addiction? • Drug addiction – a chronic relapsing state characterised by: • Compulsion to seek/take drugs • Loss of control • Emergence of a negative emotional state • Latterly, research focus has shifted from the acute effects (the high and the come-down) to addiction as an evolving condition characterised by neuroadaptation Koob and Volkow, Neuropsychopharmacology, 2010

  5. Habitual behaviours Goal-directed behaviours Impulsive (arousal/excitement)  Drug  Pleasure Compulsive (anxiety/stress)  Drug  Relief (+)ve (-)ve Binge/Intoxication Withdrawal/ Negative affect Preoccupation/ anticipation (Craving) Koob and Volkow, Neuropsychopharmacology, 2010

  6. From Intoxication to Addiction: Neurobiological Substrates for Hubris?

  7. Interim summary • We have two syndromes that entail • impaired risk appraisal • inability to foresee undesirable outcomes • dangerous decision-making (with consequent harm) • And for one (addiction) we have a sophisticated, though incomplete, understanding of the endophenotype and neurobiological basis. • Does the addiction model help us to understand Hubris Syndrome?

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  10. Summary… Addiction Hubris Low self-esteem Poor Decisions Impaired risk appraisal Incorrigbility Guilt Anxiety Depression • Habitual behaviours • Stimulus-driven • Narrowed repertoire • Devoid of goals

  11. further thoughts – dopamine function in an uncertain world.

  12. A few simple principles… • Successful interaction with our environment entails accurate predictions • Prediction-based actions are rapid and efficient • We must therefore be sensitive to (sometimes) subtle environmental regularities

  13. Prediction error – a key signal in learning ΔV = α β (λ – ΣV) Fiorillo et al

  14. Brain marker for PE-dependent learning Turner et al Cereb Cortex, 2004 Fletcher et al Nature Neurosci, 2001 Corlett et al Neuron, 2004 Murray et al, Molecular Psych, 2007; Corlett et al, Arch Gen Psych 2006; Brain 2007

  15. Update signal Prediction Error Current input Prior knowledge

  16. Update signal Prediction Error Prior knowledge Current input What happens when uncertainty is great?

  17. Arousal Personality Stress Intoxication Update signal Prediction Error Prior knowledge Current input

  18. From Intoxication to Addiction: Neurobiological Substrates for Hubris?

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