Editorial: Addiction and Attachment

Standard

Editorial: Addiction and Attachment. / Lewis, Andrew J. ; Unterrainer, Human F. ; Galbally, Megan ; Schindler, Andreas.

In: FRONT PSYCHIATRY, Vol. 11, No. 11, 27.11.2020, p. 612044.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalEditorialResearch

Harvard

Lewis, AJ, Unterrainer, HF, Galbally, M & Schindler, A 2020, 'Editorial: Addiction and Attachment', FRONT PSYCHIATRY, vol. 11, no. 11, pp. 612044. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.612044

APA

Lewis, A. J., Unterrainer, H. F., Galbally, M., & Schindler, A. (2020). Editorial: Addiction and Attachment. FRONT PSYCHIATRY, 11(11), 612044. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.612044

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{a6d8d18b38da472b81a1abbaa6e95491,
title = "Editorial: Addiction and Attachment",
abstract = "In the postscript to “Attachment Across the Life Cycle,” John Bowlby wrote: “Once we postulate the presence within the organism of an attachment behavioral system regarded as the product of evolution and as having protection as its biological function, many of the puzzles that have perplexed students of human relationships are found to be soluble” (1). This statement displays Bowlby's theoretical integration of evolutionary, functional, and behavioral levels of analysis, thereby giving attachment theory the ability to investigate a wide range of social and emotional relationships at both psychological and biological levels.There is a complex interaction between a person's attachment history, the quality of early experiences, and their propensity to addictive behaviors. Clinicians and therapists working in the addiction field address this reality on a daily basis, but the research that brings precision, systematization, and the capacity to test these assumptions is only beginning to gather pace. Connecting research in the two areas of attachment and addiction can be beneficial to each; the neurobiology of basic motivational systems of social affiliation might help us understand behavioral patterns and motivations of addiction, while the biology of addiction might help us identify the evolved systems underlying attachment.In May 2018, in the grounds of the Schlo{\ss} Sch{\"o}nbrunn in Vienna nearly 400 delegates gathered to discuss the many facets of the relationship between attachment and addiction. Following the success of the “Sucht und Bindung” [Addiction and Attachment] conference—graciously hosted by the Gr{\"u}ner Kreis Society—we put out a call for papers for a Frontiers Research Topic. We were delighted to receive 22 high quality papers providing both original studies, reviews of the latest findings, theoretically oriented discussions, and applications to clinical treatments.",
author = "Lewis, {Andrew J.} and Unterrainer, {Human F.} and Megan Galbally and Andreas Schindler",
year = "2020",
month = nov,
day = "27",
doi = "10.3389/fpsyt.2020.612044",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "612044",
journal = "FRONT PSYCHIATRY",
issn = "1664-0640",
publisher = "Frontiers Research Foundation",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Editorial: Addiction and Attachment

AU - Lewis, Andrew J.

AU - Unterrainer, Human F.

AU - Galbally, Megan

AU - Schindler, Andreas

PY - 2020/11/27

Y1 - 2020/11/27

N2 - In the postscript to “Attachment Across the Life Cycle,” John Bowlby wrote: “Once we postulate the presence within the organism of an attachment behavioral system regarded as the product of evolution and as having protection as its biological function, many of the puzzles that have perplexed students of human relationships are found to be soluble” (1). This statement displays Bowlby's theoretical integration of evolutionary, functional, and behavioral levels of analysis, thereby giving attachment theory the ability to investigate a wide range of social and emotional relationships at both psychological and biological levels.There is a complex interaction between a person's attachment history, the quality of early experiences, and their propensity to addictive behaviors. Clinicians and therapists working in the addiction field address this reality on a daily basis, but the research that brings precision, systematization, and the capacity to test these assumptions is only beginning to gather pace. Connecting research in the two areas of attachment and addiction can be beneficial to each; the neurobiology of basic motivational systems of social affiliation might help us understand behavioral patterns and motivations of addiction, while the biology of addiction might help us identify the evolved systems underlying attachment.In May 2018, in the grounds of the Schloß Schönbrunn in Vienna nearly 400 delegates gathered to discuss the many facets of the relationship between attachment and addiction. Following the success of the “Sucht und Bindung” [Addiction and Attachment] conference—graciously hosted by the Grüner Kreis Society—we put out a call for papers for a Frontiers Research Topic. We were delighted to receive 22 high quality papers providing both original studies, reviews of the latest findings, theoretically oriented discussions, and applications to clinical treatments.

AB - In the postscript to “Attachment Across the Life Cycle,” John Bowlby wrote: “Once we postulate the presence within the organism of an attachment behavioral system regarded as the product of evolution and as having protection as its biological function, many of the puzzles that have perplexed students of human relationships are found to be soluble” (1). This statement displays Bowlby's theoretical integration of evolutionary, functional, and behavioral levels of analysis, thereby giving attachment theory the ability to investigate a wide range of social and emotional relationships at both psychological and biological levels.There is a complex interaction between a person's attachment history, the quality of early experiences, and their propensity to addictive behaviors. Clinicians and therapists working in the addiction field address this reality on a daily basis, but the research that brings precision, systematization, and the capacity to test these assumptions is only beginning to gather pace. Connecting research in the two areas of attachment and addiction can be beneficial to each; the neurobiology of basic motivational systems of social affiliation might help us understand behavioral patterns and motivations of addiction, while the biology of addiction might help us identify the evolved systems underlying attachment.In May 2018, in the grounds of the Schloß Schönbrunn in Vienna nearly 400 delegates gathered to discuss the many facets of the relationship between attachment and addiction. Following the success of the “Sucht und Bindung” [Addiction and Attachment] conference—graciously hosted by the Grüner Kreis Society—we put out a call for papers for a Frontiers Research Topic. We were delighted to receive 22 high quality papers providing both original studies, reviews of the latest findings, theoretically oriented discussions, and applications to clinical treatments.

U2 - 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.612044

DO - 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.612044

M3 - Editorial

VL - 11

SP - 612044

JO - FRONT PSYCHIATRY

JF - FRONT PSYCHIATRY

SN - 1664-0640

IS - 11

ER -