Results 361 to 370 of about 1,830,234 (387)
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Adjunctive alcohol drinking in humans

Physiology & Behavior, 1988
In an attempt to validate the animal model of adjunctive ethanol drinking in people, human subjects were allowed access to ad lib beer while playing a game that delivered monetary reinforcements on a FI schedule. Subjects exposed to a longer FI schedule drank significantly more than those exposed to a shorter schedule, confirming the prediction made by
Herman H. Samson, Teresa F. Doyle
openaire   +3 more sources

Social Modification of Drinking by Alcoholics

Quarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 1974
During a program in which alcoholics could choose to drink, those whose group discussions reinforced abstinence and who stated that they would remain abstinent subsequently drank less, while discus...
Arthur I. Alterman   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Glossary of alcoholic drinks

Clinics in Dermatology, 1999
Physicians are often accused of using technical jargon to make sure that only they understand the message. As one observer noted: “The medical craft could not survive if it prescribed its medicines and described its diseases in the vernacular.” (Epilogue to Max Planck’s Where Is Science Going?) The fact is, doctors are less well informed than the ...
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Alcoholic drinks and asthma [PDF]

open access: possibleClinical & Experimental Allergy, 2002
Philip J. Thompson, Hassan Vally
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Alcoholics Do Not Drink

The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1958
No effective answers have been gained for the questions "why do alcoholics drink so much," "why can't they stop drinking" or "why can't they learn to drink moderately?" Formulators of such questions have failed to de fine the key word in these questions—drink. Drinking is defined according to a well-established system of knowledge. Then the actions of
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Drinking to regulate positive and negative emotions: a motivational model of alcohol use.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1995
The present study proposed and tested a motivational model of alcohol use in which people are hypothesized to use alcohol to regulate both positive and negative emotions.
M. Cooper   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

When Alcoholics Stop Drinking

Postgraduate Medicine, 1968
Within 24 hours after they withdraw from drink, alcoholics may start to tremble, become nauseated, be unable to sleep, turn pale or faint while upright, and become angry or hostile. Because of withdrawal seizures, delirium tremens or toxic encephalopathy, they may then convulse, hallucinate and have fever and tachycardia. Withdrawal syndromes are often
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Alcohol Drinking and Mortality

Epidemiology, 1991
Alcohol Drinking and MortalityAuthor(s): Roberta G. Ferrence, Lynn T. Kozlowski, Paolo Boffeta and Lawrence GarfinkelSource: Epidemiology, Vol. 2, No. 4 (Jul., 1991), pp. 311-313Published by: Lippincott Williams & WilkinsStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20065687 .Accessed: 25/10/2013 20 ...
Roberta Ferrence, Lynn T. Kozlowski
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Uncontrollable Events and Alcohol Drinking

British Journal of Addiction, 1987
SummaryThis paper presents a new model of alcohol drinking based on the observation that alcohol drinking often occurs following uncontrollable events. The psychological concepts of compensatory opponent process systems and learned helplessness give new insights into the biobehavioral response of organisms to environmental events and how these events ...
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A Drinking Scale for Alcoholics

Psychiatric Services, 1965
Emil Rothstein, Stanley R. Mueller
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