A structured reference for clinicians, researchers, and educators working in behavioral addiction. Grounded in current diagnostic criteria, neurobiological evidence, and treatment literature.
Behavioral addiction refers to patterns of recurrent engagement in specific activities that lead to functional impairment or clinically significant distress, despite attempts to reduce or discontinue the behavior.
Unlike substance-use disorders, diagnostic criteria do not require ingestion of a psychoactive substance.
Core clinical features commonly described in the literature include repeated difficulty resisting urges, escalating engagement over time, increasing preoccupation, and persistence despite adverse occupational, social, or psychological consequences.
Conceptually aligned with ICD-11 (WHO, 2019) and DSM-5-TR research criteria.
The neuropsychological profile closely parallels that observed in substance-use disorders, with convergent evidence from fMRI, PET imaging, and longitudinal cohort studies supporting shared reward-circuitry dysregulation as a unifying mechanism.
Nosological Classification Status
Included in both ICD-11 and DSM-5-TR as a standalone behavioral addiction category with full diagnostic criteria.
ICD-11 includes Gaming Disorder as a formal diagnosis. DSM-5-TR retains Internet Gaming Disorder in Section III as a condition for further study.
A growing body of literature examines shared neurobiological and behavioral mechanisms; formal diagnostic criteria remain under active study.
Effective assessment extends beyond confirming diagnostic criteria and should address symptom pattern, functional impairment, comorbidity, and risk profile.
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Frequency, duration, loss of control, escalation, and impairment.
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Bipolar spectrum disorders, OCD-spectrum disorders, ADHD, substance-use comorbidity.
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Mood disorders, anxiety, trauma, personality structure, suicidality, financial crisis.
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Antecedents, emotional triggers, reinforcement patterns, consequences.
Validated screening instruments remain limited for several behavioral addiction categories. These indicators, drawn from convergent research, can support structured clinical assessment while formal psychometric tools are still in development.
PGSI, SOGS (gambling); IGDS9-SF (gaming); emerging scales for other behaviors.
Escalation, failed reduction attempts, duration patterns.
Occupational, financial, relational, academic impact.
Depression, anxiety, trauma, ADHD, substance use.
Suicidality, financial destabilization, crisis indicators.
Identifying reinforcement cycles and maintaining mechanisms.
Behavioral addictions are associated with dysregulation across neural systems involved in reward processing, executive control, and stress responsivity.
Reward System Sensitization – cue-triggered salience and relapse vulnerability.
Executive Control & Inhibitory Regulation – context-dependent impulsivity and planning deficits.
Stress Reactivity & Habit Learning – automatic behavioral responses to affective states.
The evidence base for behavioral addiction treatment draws heavily from substance-use disorder literature and is expanding rapidly. Tags indicate current strength of evidence within behavioral addiction specifically.
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Cognitive restructuring, stimulus control, relapse prevention.
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Stage-matched engagement and ambivalence resolution.
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Contingency planning and structured safeguards.
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Distress tolerance and trauma integration.
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Addressing relational reinforcement cycles.
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Adjunctive treatment of comorbid psychiatric conditions.
Curated materials for clinicians, researchers, and educators — designed to support clinical decision-making and continuing education.
Curated clinically relevant literature.
Structured assessment and treatment-planning frameworks.
Plain-language materials to support clinical engagement.