Biblioteca Humberto Rosselli Quijano
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Autor Sue C. Wallingford |
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On Mourning and Recovery / R. Andrew Chambers en Psychodynamic Psychiatry, Año 2017 - Vol.45 - No.4 ([01/12/2017])
[artículo]
Título : On Mourning and Recovery : Integrating Stages of Grief and Change Toward a Neuroscience-Based Model of Attachment Adaptation in Addiction Treatment Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: R. Andrew Chambers, Autor ; Sue C. Wallingford, Autor Fecha de publicación: 2017 Artículo en la página: pp. 451-474 Idioma : Inglés (eng) Idioma original : Inglés (eng) Palabras clave: Adicción, Motivación, Apego, Dolor, Recuperación, Etapas de cambio, Hipocampo, Corteza Prefrontal, Núcleo accumbens Resumen: Interpersonal attachment and drug addiction share many attributes across their behavioral and neurobiological domains. Understanding the overlapping brain circuitry of attachment formation and addiction illuminates a deeper understanding of the pathogenesis of trauma-related mental illnesses and comorbid substance use disorders, and the extent to which ending an addiction is complicated by being a sort of mourning process. Link: ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=9773
in Psychodynamic Psychiatry > Año 2017 - Vol.45 - No.4 [01/12/2017] . - pp. 451-474[artículo] On Mourning and Recovery : Integrating Stages of Grief and Change Toward a Neuroscience-Based Model of Attachment Adaptation in Addiction Treatment [texto impreso] / R. Andrew Chambers, Autor ; Sue C. Wallingford, Autor . - 2017 . - pp. 451-474.
Idioma : Inglés (eng) Idioma original : Inglés (eng)
in Psychodynamic Psychiatry > Año 2017 - Vol.45 - No.4 [01/12/2017] . - pp. 451-474
Palabras clave: Adicción, Motivación, Apego, Dolor, Recuperación, Etapas de cambio, Hipocampo, Corteza Prefrontal, Núcleo accumbens Resumen: Interpersonal attachment and drug addiction share many attributes across their behavioral and neurobiological domains. Understanding the overlapping brain circuitry of attachment formation and addiction illuminates a deeper understanding of the pathogenesis of trauma-related mental illnesses and comorbid substance use disorders, and the extent to which ending an addiction is complicated by being a sort of mourning process. Link: ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=9773