A new doctoral dissertation shows that gambling disorder is linked to brain networks involved in self-control and brain ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Alcohol hijacks your brain and shatters it into chaotic local fragments
Alcohol does not simply relax the mind. It rewires it. With repeated use, drinking can splinter the brain’s carefully coordinated networks into scattered, competing circuits that chase the next drink ...
As our understanding of the neurobiology of addiction evolves, so do opportunities to develop more precise, brain-based interventions for co-occurring disorders. In our free webinar, "Advancing ...
A new doctoral dissertation from the University of Turku shows that gambling disorder is rooted in specific brain networks responsible for reward and self-control. The research indicates that people ...
We often view our cravings—whether for drugs, alcohol, food, or approval—as indictments of our character. Yet neuroscience ...
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 ...
Methamphetamine addiction has a way of looping back on itself. A rush of pleasure pulls you in, cravings follow, and the ...
On January 29 President Donald Trump issued an executive order launching “The Great American Recovery Initiative,” a White ...
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