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Frontiers in psychiatry · Jan 2015
ReviewContingency Management and Deliberative Decision-Making Processes.
- Paul S Regier and A David Redish.
- Graduate Program in Neuroscience, University of Minnesota , Minneapolis, MN , USA.
- Front Psychiatry. 2015 Jan 1; 6: 76.
AbstractContingency management is an effective treatment for drug addiction. The current explanation for its success is rooted in alternative reinforcement theory. We suggest that alternative reinforcement theory is inadequate to explain the success of contingency management and produce a model based on demand curves that show how little the monetary rewards offered in this treatment would affect drug use. Instead, we offer an explanation of its success based on the concept that it accesses deliberative decision-making processes. We suggest that contingency management is effective because it offers a concrete and immediate alternative to using drugs, which engages deliberative processes, improves the ability of those deliberative processes to attend to non-drug options, and offsets more automatic action-selection systems. This theory makes explicit predictions that can be tested, suggests which users will be most helped by contingency management, and suggests improvements in its implementation.
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