About this Research Topic
Although these findings support an important role for biased motivational processes in the development and maintenance of addiction and the potential of changing motivational processes in the treatment of addiction, some important issues remain unclear:
• Mechanisms underlying motivational biases. Are motivational biases goal directed actions or more habitual? What is the influence of (emotional) context and drug intoxication on the expression of these processes? What are the underlying neurobiological mechanisms?
• Relationship between different motivational processes. To what extent do the different processes (i.e., like craving, attention bias, approach bias measure the same underlying construct?
• Role of motivational processes in drug use versus abuse and dependence. At which stage do motivational biases develop? Do motivational biases still guide behaviour in addicted individuals?
• Commonalities and differences in motivational processes between different addictions.
• Changing motivational processes in treatment for addiction. This includes methods like neuromodulation (rTMS, tDCS), pharmacotherapy, and neuropsychological tasks.
The goal of this research topic is to collect and review knowledge regarding the motivational mechanisms underlying drug use, abuse, and addiction. What moves the addict and how can we use this information to move the addict away from drug use? We welcome original research papers on human as well as animal work, methodological papers, and review papers.
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.