Results 361 to 370 of about 960,477 (390)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Addiction

Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 2013
Drug and alcohol addiction is a debilitating disorder characterized by persistent drug-seeking behaviors despite negative physiological, medical, or social consequences. Neurobiological models of addiction propose that the reinforcing effects of addictive drugs are associated with altered neurotransmission within the reward 'mesocorticolimbic ...
Barry J, Everitt, Ulrike, Heberlein
openaire   +5 more sources

Addictive Platforms

Management Science, 2021
We study competition for consumer attention in which platforms can sacrifice service quality for attention. A platform can choose the “addictiveness” of its service. A more addictive platform yields consumers a lower utility of participation but a higher marginal utility of allocating attention.
Ichihashi, Shota, Kim, Byung-Cheol
openaire   +2 more sources

Epigenetics of Addiction

Neurochemistry International, 2021
Substance use disorders are complex biopsychosocial disorders that have substantial negative neurocognitive impact in various patient populations. These diseases involve the compulsive use of licit or illicit substances despite adverse medicolegal consequences and appear to be secondary to long-lasting epigenetic and transcriptional adaptations in ...
Subramaniam Jayanthi, Jean Lud Cadet
openaire   +3 more sources

Addiction and addiction journals

Drug and Alcohol Review, 2008
This is the last issue of the Drug and Alcohol Review to be published under my hand as Editor in Chief, a position to which I was appointed in 1983 and which I shall demit as from January 2009 afte...
openaire   +3 more sources

Addiction

Journal Of Pain & Palliative Care Pharmacotherapy, 2005
Addiction to opioid analgesics is a great and often exaggerated concern to many patients and their support groups. This consultation describes a way to explain the disease of addiction to patients.
openaire   +2 more sources

The Drug Addict and the Stigma of Addiction

International Journal of the Addictions, 1984
Two hundred and fifty-six respondents from a small, upper-midwestern college town answered a questionnaire designed to assess their first impression images of the term "drug addict." The results indicated that the overwhelming image was of a disoriented, unhealthy, thin, low-class, male "hippie" with behavioral and skin problems who suffered from a ...
James C. Dean, Faith Rud
openaire   +2 more sources

Addiction

Annual Review of Psychology, 2003
The development of addiction involves a transition from casual to compulsive patterns of drug use. This transition to addiction is accompanied by many drug-induced changes in the brain and associated changes in psychological functions. In this article we present a critical analysis of the major theoretical explanations of how drug-induced alterations ...
Terry E, Robinson, Kent C, Berridge
openaire   +2 more sources

Addiction Careers and Careers in Addiction

Substance Use & Misuse, 1999
Research into resocialization of criminals or into recovery from substance dependence has stressed the need to give up the deviant identity and lifestyle. However, addiction careers, crime, and other types of deviant behavior require a wide range of skills.
openaire   +3 more sources

[Addiction].

Revue medicale suisse, 2015
This year, the actuality about addiction is on psychopharmacology, in the controversy about the prescription of baclofene to reduce the craving for alcohol. More results from controlled studies are expected. The development of smartphones to access toe-Health skills is questionable, especially in matterofevaluation of these programs.
Besson, Jacques   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

ADDICTION, ADDICTING DRUGS, AND THE ANESTHESIOLOGIST

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1959
Patients who are addicted to narcotics pose a special problem to the anesthesiologist because they sometimes require unusually large doses of premedicants and anesthetics, manifest withdrawal symptoms while in the hospital, develop complications (e. g., tetanus and hepatitis) from previous infections, or act in devious ways to conceal or satisfy their ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy