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Alcohol, Other Drugs, and Behavior, 2e
Alcohol, Other Drugs, and Behavior, 2e

... I have found it useful to assign students the task of preparing several multiple-choice items for each chapter prior to an exam, with the promise that some of the well-written items will be included on exams. This assignment motivates students to study the material in ways that help them prepare for ...
What are drugs? - Lakehurst School District
What are drugs? - Lakehurst School District

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Behavioral Perspective Test
Behavioral Perspective Test

... 8. Read the following example and choose the best term to describe the situation. A talkative student is sitting at their desk and is being mildly electrically shocked every 3 minutes. The student obviously doesn’t like being shocked but knows that if she leaves her desk she will not have the opport ...
Science of Addiction - Prairie Ridge Integrated Behavioral Healthcare
Science of Addiction - Prairie Ridge Integrated Behavioral Healthcare

... The human brain consists of several large regions with each one responsible for some of the activities necessary for life (Kandel, 1991). These include the brainstem, cerebellum, limbic system, diencephalon, and cerebral cortex. Specific areas of the brain control different functions, such as seei ...
Understanding Drug Use and Addiction
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... What happens to the brain when a person takes drugs? Most drugs affect the brain's "reward circuit" by flooding it with the chemical messenger dopamine. This reward system controls the body's ability to feel pleasure and motivates a person to repeat behaviors needed to thrive, such as eating and sp ...
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LESSON 5.7 WORKBOOK

... 1930s, people addicted to drugs were thought to be morally flawed and lacking in willpower. Those views shaped society’s responses to drug abuse, treating it as a moral failing rather than a health problem, which led to an emphasis of punitive rather than preventative and therapeutic actions. Today, ...
Behavioral Perspective Quiz
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TOXOLOGY OF DRUGS OF ABUSE

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Personality Disorders and Drug Addiction

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narcotics
narcotics

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Addiction to Alcohol and Other Drugs

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Pathological cycling in addiction (Koob, Neuron

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A. V. Sapay, O. N. Produn, A. V. Aleksandrova Psychological

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Self-administration

Self-administration is, in its medical sense, the process of a subject administering a pharmacological substance to him-, her-, or itself. A clinical example of this is the subcutaneous ""self-injection"" of insulin by a diabetic patient.In animal experimentation, self-administration is a form of operant conditioning where the reward is a drug. This drug can be administered remotely through an implanted intravenous line or an intracerebroventricular injection. Self-administration of putatively addictive drugs is considered one of the most valid experimental models to investigate drug-seeking and drug-taking behavior. The higher the frequency with which a test animal emits the operant behavior, the more rewarding (and addictive), the test substance is considered. Self-administration of addictive drugs has been studied using humans, non-human primates, mice, and, most commonly, rats.Self-administration of heroin and cocaine is used to screen drugs for possible effects in reducing drug-taking behavior, especially reinstatement of drug seeking after extinction. Drugs with this effect may be useful for treating people with drug addiction by helping them establish abstinence or reducing their probability or relapsing to drug use after a period of abstinence.In a prominent model of self-administration developed by George Koob, rats are allowed to self-administer cocaine for either 1 hour each day (short access) or 6 hours each day (long access). Those animals who are allowed to self-administer for 6 hours a day show behavior that is thought to resemble cocaine dependence, such as an escalation of the total dose taken during each session and an increase in the dose taken when cocaine is first made available.
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