从进化和神经心理学角度看成瘾行为和成瘾物质:与 "食物成瘾 "概念的相关性。

IF 5.1 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation Pub Date : 2014-12-12 eCollection Date: 2014-01-01 DOI:10.2147/SAR.S56835
Caroline Davis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

有人认为,与传统的滥用药物不同,食物不会让人 "上瘾",因为食物是生活中不可或缺的一部分。本文主要从进化心理生物学的角度回顾了有关证据,即以植物为基础的精神活性药物(如从罂粟和古柯叶中提取的药物)和与赌博有关的行为曾经对人类的健康和生存具有适应性,就像以能量为基础的食物对营养的适应性一样。"进化错配 "观点认为,某些行为在狩猎采集的生活方式中得到了加强--我们的基因禀赋就来源于这种生活方式--因为它们赋予了物种生存和繁殖的优势。然而,在先进技术和其他快速环境变化的背景下,这些行为往往变得不适应,并被过度表现出来。与人工提纯的植物性精神药物类似,加工食品和高美味食品中的高糖、高脂肪和高盐分也大大超出了自然生产的食品。因此,可以得出结论,曾经对我们的生存有益和必要的东西,已经被改变和超加工成了可能有害和有潜在成瘾性的可食用产品。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Evolutionary and neuropsychological perspectives on addictive behaviors and addictive substances: relevance to the "food addiction" construct.

It has been argued that food cannot be "addictive", unlike conventional drugs of abuse, because it is an essential part of life. In this paper, evidence is reviewed, largely from an evolutionary psychobiological perspective, that plant-based psychoactive drugs (such as those derived from the opium poppy and the coca leaf) and gambling-related behaviors were once adaptive for human health and survival in a similar manner as energy-based foods were for nourishment. "Evolutionary mismatch" viewpoints contend that certain behaviors were enhanced during the hunter-gatherer lifestyle - from which our genetic endowment had its origins - because they bestowed both survival and reproductive advantages to the species. However, in the context of advanced technology and other rapid environmental changes, these same behaviors have tended to become maladaptive and greatly overexpressed. Similar to the manufactured purification of psychotropic plant-based substances, the reward impact of processed and hyperpalatable foods, with their high levels of sugar, fat, and salt, is much increased from foods produced in nature. It is concluded therefore that what was once beneficial and necessary for our survival has been altered and ultraprocessed into edible products that may be disadvantageous and potentially addictive.

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