Acute and chronic effects of cannabinoids on human brain: gene-environment interactions
... Acute and chronic effects of cannabinoids on human brain: gene-environment interactions related to psychiatric disorders Albert Batalla Cases ...
... Acute and chronic effects of cannabinoids on human brain: gene-environment interactions related to psychiatric disorders Albert Batalla Cases ...
Psilocybin Final Project-PDF
... • Well-ordered correlation state • Not much cross-linking between networks ...
... • Well-ordered correlation state • Not much cross-linking between networks ...
Specialized Elements of Orbitofrontal Cortex in Primates
... of identifiable layers, the presence or absence of layer IV, neuronal density, and others. For example, areas that have fewer than six layers are different in type than areas that have six layers. To use an analogy, grouping by cortical type is like grouping people by similar height or weight. The p ...
... of identifiable layers, the presence or absence of layer IV, neuronal density, and others. For example, areas that have fewer than six layers are different in type than areas that have six layers. To use an analogy, grouping by cortical type is like grouping people by similar height or weight. The p ...
... sciatic nerve of male transgenic RIP-I/hIFNβ mice. In this model, the involvement of NTs/NTRs in the neuroregenerative process was evaluated in the nerve, in the corresponding dorsal root ganglia and in the lumbar spinal cord segments at different time points after surgery. Our findings indicated ch ...
Costs-and-Benefits-of-Superfast-Broadband
... development of transactions involving such non-monetary rewards, just as it helps the development of commerce. The Internet can, of course, have both good and bad effects: perhaps the most troublesome bad effect is the ‘digital divide’ that separates ever more active users of the Internet from non-u ...
... development of transactions involving such non-monetary rewards, just as it helps the development of commerce. The Internet can, of course, have both good and bad effects: perhaps the most troublesome bad effect is the ‘digital divide’ that separates ever more active users of the Internet from non-u ...
Different representations of pleasant and unpleasant odours in the
... period, the odour was rated using a button box for both pleasantness and intensity, using a visual rating scale from 2 (very pleasant/very strong) to 2 (very unpleasant/very weak). fMRI data acquisition Images were acquired with a 3.0-T VARIAN/SIEMENS whole-body scanner at FMRIB, Oxford. Local brai ...
... period, the odour was rated using a button box for both pleasantness and intensity, using a visual rating scale from 2 (very pleasant/very strong) to 2 (very unpleasant/very weak). fMRI data acquisition Images were acquired with a 3.0-T VARIAN/SIEMENS whole-body scanner at FMRIB, Oxford. Local brai ...
Unclassified DSTI/ICCP/IE(2006)7/FINAL Working Party on the
... Definition, measurement and drivers of user-created content There is no widely accepted definition of UCC, and measuring its social, cultural and economic impacts are in the early stages. In this study UCC is defined as: i) content made publicly available over the Internet, ii) which reflects a “cer ...
... Definition, measurement and drivers of user-created content There is no widely accepted definition of UCC, and measuring its social, cultural and economic impacts are in the early stages. In this study UCC is defined as: i) content made publicly available over the Internet, ii) which reflects a “cer ...
Neural effects of positive and negative incentives during marijuana
... instance, using the MID, Kim et al. (2006) reported that the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) is active during successful avoidance of monetary loss in healthy individuals [21]. Neuroimaging studies have also suggested that reward-motivation systems are differentially affected by drug-seeking behavior, su ...
... instance, using the MID, Kim et al. (2006) reported that the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) is active during successful avoidance of monetary loss in healthy individuals [21]. Neuroimaging studies have also suggested that reward-motivation systems are differentially affected by drug-seeking behavior, su ...
Neural Effects of Positive and Negative Incentives during
... instance, using the MID, Kim et al. (2006) reported that the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) is active during successful avoidance of monetary loss in healthy individuals [21]. Neuroimaging studies have also suggested that reward-motivation systems are differentially affected by drug-seeking behavior, su ...
... instance, using the MID, Kim et al. (2006) reported that the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) is active during successful avoidance of monetary loss in healthy individuals [21]. Neuroimaging studies have also suggested that reward-motivation systems are differentially affected by drug-seeking behavior, su ...
Information War in the Internet. The conflict, which cannot be won
... prior to discussing their own experiences. Besides sharing their experiences, many emphasized that they regard Russian media to be much more trustworthy compared to Ukrainian and Western reports. This indicates the importance of war-related information to the people. Unfortunately, I was forced to l ...
... prior to discussing their own experiences. Besides sharing their experiences, many emphasized that they regard Russian media to be much more trustworthy compared to Ukrainian and Western reports. This indicates the importance of war-related information to the people. Unfortunately, I was forced to l ...
Prediction error for free monetary reward in the human prefrontal
... Studies in both humans and nonhuman primates have shown that frontostriatal circuits are important for mediating the influence of reward expectation on the selection and preparation of actions. Specific dopamine-rich regions within the prefrontal cortex (Goldman-Rakic et al., 1992; Lidow et al., 199 ...
... Studies in both humans and nonhuman primates have shown that frontostriatal circuits are important for mediating the influence of reward expectation on the selection and preparation of actions. Specific dopamine-rich regions within the prefrontal cortex (Goldman-Rakic et al., 1992; Lidow et al., 199 ...
Methamphetamine Users in Sustained Abstinence
... parameters were used for data acquisition: pulsed sequence database, PROBE-P; orientation, axial-oblique (anterior commissure–posterior commissure line); echo time, 144 milliseconds; repetition time, 1500 milliseconds; number of spectral points, 2048; spectral bandwidth, 2500 Hz; total number of rep ...
... parameters were used for data acquisition: pulsed sequence database, PROBE-P; orientation, axial-oblique (anterior commissure–posterior commissure line); echo time, 144 milliseconds; repetition time, 1500 milliseconds; number of spectral points, 2048; spectral bandwidth, 2500 Hz; total number of rep ...
scholarly research on post-divorce parenting and
... salient and may be recalled with a high degree of accuracy (e.g. were your parents divorced, how old were you when they divorced). This approach has been successfully used by Lye et al. (1995) and forms the basis of much of the work in McLanahan and Sandefur (1994). However, research with prospectiv ...
... salient and may be recalled with a high degree of accuracy (e.g. were your parents divorced, how old were you when they divorced). This approach has been successfully used by Lye et al. (1995) and forms the basis of much of the work in McLanahan and Sandefur (1994). However, research with prospectiv ...
Can practice theory inspire studies on ICTs in everyday life?
... a new “normality” in everyday life: the expectations and conventions regarding the necessary “infrastructure” of a normal home and the ordinary gear of a normal way of life are changing, and the changes proceed rapidly. The aim with this paper is to take a closer look at this construction of new nor ...
... a new “normality” in everyday life: the expectations and conventions regarding the necessary “infrastructure” of a normal home and the ordinary gear of a normal way of life are changing, and the changes proceed rapidly. The aim with this paper is to take a closer look at this construction of new nor ...
Why is parkinsonism not a feature of human methamphetamine users?
... Since the discovery that MA is harmful to brain dopamine nerve terminals in animals, by causing either short-term or persistent loss of dopamine, there has been a public health concern that illicit recreational use of the drug by humans will lead to the emergence of the symptoms of Parkinson's disea ...
... Since the discovery that MA is harmful to brain dopamine nerve terminals in animals, by causing either short-term or persistent loss of dopamine, there has been a public health concern that illicit recreational use of the drug by humans will lead to the emergence of the symptoms of Parkinson's disea ...
Doing it for ourselves: The Pirate Bay as strategic
... and uploading, liking, sharing, following and bookmarking. The economy of attention is, then, also the economy of socialization of ideas, affects and percepts, and hence an economy of social production and cooperation. But are theories of the attention economy equipped to deal with the socially prod ...
... and uploading, liking, sharing, following and bookmarking. The economy of attention is, then, also the economy of socialization of ideas, affects and percepts, and hence an economy of social production and cooperation. But are theories of the attention economy equipped to deal with the socially prod ...
Responses of the Human Brain to Mild Dehydration and
... et al,11 and Watson et al12 induced dehydration by thermal exercises. They reported no significant effect of dehydration on brain volume. Results on ventricular volume ranged from decrease12 to increase,7,10 and Dickson et al found no changes.11 Duning et al13 showed a 0.55% brain volume reduction a ...
... et al,11 and Watson et al12 induced dehydration by thermal exercises. They reported no significant effect of dehydration on brain volume. Results on ventricular volume ranged from decrease12 to increase,7,10 and Dickson et al found no changes.11 Duning et al13 showed a 0.55% brain volume reduction a ...
ICLS Occasional Paper 6.1 Families and Children Study 2006 – 2008.
... Series for those who were not able to attend the event or for those who might want to read the material covered in the seminar. See below for a full list of papers from this event. Work – Life Balance Seminar Abstract Much is written in the press about ‘Stay-at-Home’ and ‘Have-it-All’ mothers. Many ...
... Series for those who were not able to attend the event or for those who might want to read the material covered in the seminar. See below for a full list of papers from this event. Work – Life Balance Seminar Abstract Much is written in the press about ‘Stay-at-Home’ and ‘Have-it-All’ mothers. Many ...
Calculating Consequences - Human Reward and Decision Making lab
... to exclude those with a previous history of neurological or psychiatric gap ⫽ 0 mm) with BOLD contrast. To recover signal loss from dropout illness. All subjects gave informed consent, and the study was approved in the medial orbitofrontal cortex (mOFC) (O’Doherty et al., 2002), each by the Institut ...
... to exclude those with a previous history of neurological or psychiatric gap ⫽ 0 mm) with BOLD contrast. To recover signal loss from dropout illness. All subjects gave informed consent, and the study was approved in the medial orbitofrontal cortex (mOFC) (O’Doherty et al., 2002), each by the Institut ...
decsai.ugr.es - Soft Computing and Intelligent Information Systems
... the academics in the task of validating the theoretical models they propose. Specifically, the main capability of this method, thus its main attraction, is to test causal relationships among the diversity of constructs (with multiple measurement items) integrating a model (Jöreskog and Sörbom, 1993) ...
... the academics in the task of validating the theoretical models they propose. Specifically, the main capability of this method, thus its main attraction, is to test causal relationships among the diversity of constructs (with multiple measurement items) integrating a model (Jöreskog and Sörbom, 1993) ...
Monoaminergic dysfunction in recreational users of
... brain. In this study reductions in striatal DAT binding were observed using single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) (Reneman et al., 2002) in combined ecstasy and dAMPH users versus sole ecstasy users. Because DA is involved in many important neurobehavioral functions, such as executive a ...
... brain. In this study reductions in striatal DAT binding were observed using single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) (Reneman et al., 2002) in combined ecstasy and dAMPH users versus sole ecstasy users. Because DA is involved in many important neurobehavioral functions, such as executive a ...
Internet Auction
... Then gradually decreases his asking until the buyers emerge with bids to purchase at the price. ...
... Then gradually decreases his asking until the buyers emerge with bids to purchase at the price. ...
Content - erie1bocesalternativeeducation
... scientific method. Students will be able to observe and compare information. Classify data Measure using appropriate tools. Analyze and communicate solutions found to a problem. ...
... scientific method. Students will be able to observe and compare information. Classify data Measure using appropriate tools. Analyze and communicate solutions found to a problem. ...
Long-term use of psychedelic drugs is associated with differences in
... Three classic neuropsychological tests were administered by computer: (a) two-back test to assess working memory (Kircher, 1958); (b) Wisconsin Card-sorting Test (WCST) to assess executive function (including planning, set shifting and inhibition of impulsive responses (Heaton et al., 2001)); and (c ...
... Three classic neuropsychological tests were administered by computer: (a) two-back test to assess working memory (Kircher, 1958); (b) Wisconsin Card-sorting Test (WCST) to assess executive function (including planning, set shifting and inhibition of impulsive responses (Heaton et al., 2001)); and (c ...
Middle Childhood and Adolescence Final Paper
... lifetime. This is why it is crucial to consider all of the conflicting messages that adolescents are receiving on a daily basis. For example if an adolescent is exposed to images of people smoking cigarettes that they perceive as fashionable people, or good looking people, they may assimilate or acc ...
... lifetime. This is why it is crucial to consider all of the conflicting messages that adolescents are receiving on a daily basis. For example if an adolescent is exposed to images of people smoking cigarettes that they perceive as fashionable people, or good looking people, they may assimilate or acc ...
Psychological effects of Internet use
Various researchers have undertaken efforts to examine the psychological effects of Internet use. Some research employs studying brain functions in Internet users. Some studies assert that these changes are harmful, while others argue that asserted changes are beneficial.