Aspect Model of Addiction Infographic

The Aspect Model of Addiction

A Theoretical Framework for Substance Use Disorders as a Catalyzed Dissociative Process

Core Thesis

The Aspect Model posits that chronic substance use acts as a catalyst for the development of a semi-autonomous psychological construct, an 'Aspect', which drives addictive behavior. This framework integrates concepts from dissociation theory and ego-state therapy to provide a structural explanation for the phenomenological experience of addiction.

Key Concepts

The Aspect

A semi-autonomous psychological complex developed through habitual substance use, with its own drives and personality characteristics, that compels the host to secure the addictive substance.

Catalyst-Specific Phenotypes

Different substances generate distinct Aspect phenotypes—Sedative-Hypnotic, Stimulant, Opioid, and Cannabinoid—each with unique characteristics, benefits, and prices.

Price-Benefit Dynamic

The Aspect engineers an increasingly intense 'Price' (negative states) in sobriety, making the cessation of this Price upon substance use feel like a 'benefit', creating a negative reinforcement loop.

Dissociative Framework

The model conceptualizes the Aspect as a dissociative entity, providing a non-spiritual etiology for experiences phenomenologically identical to possession trance disorders.

Resources