id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_qevp7mnsyng7lfewuzicuirguq Nicholas Zautra Embodiment, Interaction, and Experience: Toward a Comprehensive Model in Addiction Science 2015 12 .pdf application/pdf 5206 395 48 account for differences in embodiment, interaction processes, and the experience of addiction. addiction that follows the enactive model of autism proposed by Hanne De Jaegher. described as a unique way of connecting to, making sense of, and navigating the world, determined by the IWEA and their particular embodiment Addiction, understood as a difference in embodiment and sense-making, is the process of "coordinating the needs of [IWEA] (biological, affective/cognitive, addiction in terms of differences in embodiment in the way IWEA coordinate their needs with environmental factors. features"—toward reward-predicting stimuli (i.e., stimuli for which individuals are willing to work and which are approached), primarily drugor addictive-behavior-related cues (West 2013, 89). IWEA, specifically "in individuals exhibiting addictive behavior in general If embodiment differences in IWEA are intrinsically linked with sensemaking in addiction, I suggest, as De Jaegher (2013) has with autism, that The enactive account of addiction thus considers the way IWEA relate ./cache/work_qevp7mnsyng7lfewuzicuirguq.pdf ./txt/work_qevp7mnsyng7lfewuzicuirguq.txt