Abstract
Addiction is characterized by a subjective experience of powerlessness over one's behavior, yet articulation of precise mechanisms of powerlessness is essential to inform recovery. We assert that straightforward behavioral learning processes produce powerful habituation of behavior and comprise a significant but overlooked dimension of powerlessness. A behavioral learning model captures this neurobiological mechanism of habituation and addiction, while informing intervention in everyday terms. After presenting the model, we then describe it in more accessible instructional language that might be used with clients. A second paper (Butler, Meloy, & Call, 2014) articulates how a learning model informs rehabilitation of learned powerlessness, for recovery. The model can be presented psychoeducationally or clinically.
Published Version
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