25 November 2025
The new study brings together two research areas that normally stay separate: individual decision-making and social influence. ‘Addiction isn’t just something that happens inside a person,’ says lead author Jesse Boot. ‘It also happens between people. Our goal was to build a model that captures both for the first time.’
Most addiction models focus on one side of the story. Some describe how the brain’s reward and control systems battle it out. Others look at peer influence, social networks and community-level outbreaks. But in reality addiction involves both – internal urges and external pressures.
The new model shows how two internal forces shape substance use over time: a reward-driven system that pushes people to use, and a control system that tries to limit use.
These two forces can shift depending on someone’s experiences. Repeated use, for example, can gradually increase sensitivity to a substance – a process known as sensitisation. At the same time, social circles can either strengthen control (e.g. supportive friends) or weaken it (e.g. heavy-using peers).
To build their framework, the researchers adapted a mathematical model originally developed to explain sudden outbreaks of spruce budworms in Canadian forests. It turns out that the same kind of “tipping point” behaviour – long stability followed by abrupt shifts – also helps explain important phenomena in addiction.
Addiction isn’t just an individual problem or a social problem - it’s both. And when we model it that way, the pieces finally start to fit.Hans van der Maas
Using computer simulations, the team found that their model naturally mirrored well-known patterns in substance use and dependence:
‘These are patterns clinicians see every day, but until now, they weren’t captured in a single model,’ says addiction expert and co-author Reinout Wiers. ‘That’s what makes this framework so exciting.’
The researchers also extended the model to explore interactions between different substances. For example, they show how vaping and smoking can either compete – with vaping sometimes helping people quit cigarettes – or reinforce each other, depending on the situation.
They also found that increasing the availability of a substance doesn’t always cause more use. Problems arise when availability increases and people’s sense of control weakens – a scenario that echoes the rise of online gambling and opioid crises.
By showing how internal psychology and social networks interact, the new model could help policymakers design more effective prevention strategies and also help clinicians understand why recovery often requires social change as well as individual effort.
‘Addiction isn’t just an individual problem or a social problem,’ says principal investigator Han van der Maas. ‘It’s both. And when we model it that way, the pieces finally start to fit.’