Addiction is one of the most intensely studied conditions in modern medicine, yet even with high‑resolution brain scans and ...
Why someone becomes addicted to a substance has long baffled scientists and philosophers. Now leading researchers are getting the clearest picture yet of how addiction works in the brain and body.
One way to get that pleasure is to seek retaliation. Additional brain scan studies have shown that when people imagine ...
A new study published in the journal Science Signaling has found that an immune system protein plays a central role in the ...
From meditation to molecular science, addiction treatment is being reinvented. See how new breakthroughs are giving hope for recovery.
Health Affairs' Rob Lott interviews Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) at the National Institutes of Health, to discuss addiction as a brain disorder, treatments for ...
For years, addiction was seen as a matter of personal failure—a bad habit or a lack of discipline. People believed those who struggled with substance abuse could stop if they simply wanted to. But ...
Explore the connections between the world of neuroscience and nuances of substance use disorders with our inaugural episode of In Such a Place. We’ll speak with Dr. Anna Radke, a leading expert in the ...
Addiction often isn’t about chasing pleasure—it’s about escaping pain. Researchers at Scripps Research have discovered that a tiny brain region called the paraventricular nucleus of the thalamus (PVT) ...
Remarkable scientific progress over the past five decades has helped us develop knowledge of how drugs of abuse induce pleasure, reinforce use, and lead to the compulsive self-administration we call ...
A neuroscientist explains how highly processed foods may be key to “food addiction.” She also reveals some solutions ...