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The Addicted Mind Podcast

101: Cognitive Bias and Addiction with Andrew Proulx

The Addicted Mind Podcast

Duane Osterlind, LMFT

Mental Health, Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.7655 Ratings

🗓️ 16 July 2020

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On today’s episode of The Addicted Mind Podcast, Duane talks with Andrew P. about the concept of cognitive bias and how this process works in the middle of addiction. Andrew also talks about his own journey with addiction in light cognitive bias.

Calming The Addicted Mind - 6 Day Mindfulness Email Series theaddictedmind.com/mindfulness

Alongside his medical practice, Andrew ran a psychotherapy practice for 15 years before becoming addicted to alcohol and opiates. After hitting rock bottom, Andrew’s friends brought him to a 12-step program and a light went off that allowed for him. Being able to see that other people were able to get themselves out of the pit was huge. It’s crucial to understand that there’s nothing wrong with you, but that the symptoms of addiction are common.

Cognitive bias, or our natural inclination to make information match what we already believe, was the research focus for Andrew for many years. He found that people with addictions distort information to the extremes using a very intense form of cognitive bias. In other words, addiction amplifies the effects of cognitive bias.

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Being able to recognize cognitive bias at all can help the addict, because it challenges you to think about the way that you’re thinking: metacognition or plain mindfulness. People ultimately want to know the why; they want to know why they think the way they do, and why their brain works the way it does.

Andrew encourages people to be open-minded, which he recognizes is difficult. Creating a list of feedback from other people can help to defeat cognitive bias. The empty chair technique works to try to visualize the situation if you don’t have someone in arm’s reach to offer feedback. There are techniques you can actually use to challenge your cognitive biases, which can help you to overcome your addiction.

Andrew wants everyone to know that all are capable of a lasting recovery if they only accept the help that is out there.

Episode Link

theaddictedmind.com/101

Andrew breaks down three prominent forms of cognitive bias that

  • The attentional bias, or the bias that’s attached to our attention.
  • The optimism bias, where we cling to the belief that things will end up okay, despite all evidence pointing to your own destruction.
  • The recall bias, in which the addict recalls what they want to believe. They forget the bad stuff and recall the bad days as something rosy-glassed.
  •  



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    Transcript

    Click on a timestamp to play from that location

    0:00.0

    All right, everyone, welcome to the Addicted Mind podcast.

    0:09.0

    We are on to episode 101.

    0:11.1

    My name is Dwayne Austerlund, and I'm your host.

    0:13.9

    And our guest today is Andrew Prue, who is going to talk about his research around cognitive bias.

    0:22.6

    I was really happy that Andrew was able to reach out to me

    0:26.4

    and asked to come on to the podcast

    0:28.8

    because I love this kind of research.

    0:31.7

    I love looking at how the brain operates in the addictive process

    0:36.3

    and how we can do something about that.

    0:39.7

    One of the things on his topic here, which is cognitive bias,

    0:44.0

    and understanding cognitive bias is that we all have some cognitive bias.

    0:49.0

    But when we get into the addictive process, that cognitive bias is amplified,

    0:58.0

    which enables us to sometimes really make some bad decisions when we're in the midst of addiction, which causes more unmanageability in

    1:03.1

    our life and more problems. So Andrew addresses that and talks about that and talks about his

    1:10.2

    own journey with addiction,

    1:12.7

    which motivated him to do some of this research to understand, hey, how could I make those

    1:17.4

    decisions I did in the midst of addiction? Because I look back now and I'm like,

    1:20.6

    that wasn't really, those weren't really great decisions, right? So it was great to have him

    1:25.3

    on and really appreciate him coming on to the podcast so that's

    1:28.3

    awesome all right everybody if you are enjoying the addicted mind podcast please rate and review us in

    1:34.0

    iTunes I really appreciate that and I do read them and I do see them and I do take feedback from

    1:40.1

    them too to try and improve the podcast so that is really helpful to you listeners out there

    ...

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