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One or more keywords matched the following properties of De Wit, Harriet
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overview The de Wit laboratory investigates the subjective, behavioral and physiological effects of drugs of abuse in healthy human volunteers. Some studies are designed to identify individual differences and risk factors for excessive use, and others to determine the effects of drugs on mood, psychomotor and cognitive performance, and brain activity. Another major interest is the study of conditioned drug effects, or cues, that influence future drug use.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to De Wit, Harriet
Item TypeName
Concept Individuality
Academic Article Self-administration of pentobarbital in light and moderate alcohol drinkers.
Academic Article Reinforcing effects of extended inhalation of nitrous oxide in humans.
Academic Article Individual differences in acute effects of drugs in humans: their relevance to risk for abuse.
Academic Article Individual differences in the biphasic effects of ethanol.
Academic Article Individual differences in subjective responses to ethanol and triazolam.
Academic Article Individual differences in responses to ethanol and d-amphetamine: a within-subject study.
Academic Article Cue-reactors: individual differences in cue-induced craving after food or smoking abstinence.
Academic Article Quantifying talk: developing reliable measures of verbal productivity.
Academic Article Human behavioral pharmacology, past, present, and future: symposium presented at the 50th annual meeting of the Behavioral Pharmacology Society.
Academic Article Relationship between subjective effects and drug preferences: ethanol and diazepam.
Academic Article Stress-induced changes in mood and cortisol release predict mood effects of amphetamine.
Academic Article Individual differences in the priming effect of ethanol in social drinkers.
Academic Article Do initial responses to drugs predict future use or abuse?
Academic Article Multivariate analysis of subjective responses to d-amphetamine in healthy volunteers finds novel genetic pathway associations.
Academic Article A Preliminary Investigation of Individual Differences in Subjective Responses to D-Amphetamine, Alcohol, and Delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol Using a Within-Subjects Randomized Trial.
Academic Article Emotional traits predict individual differences in amphetamine-induced positive mood in healthy volunteers.
Academic Article Individual differences in timing of peak positive subjective responses to d-amphetamine: Relationship to pharmacokinetics and physiology.
Grant Determinants of Drug Preference in Humans
Academic Article Sweet taste liking is associated with subjective response to amphetamine in women but not men.
Academic Article Anticipation of monetary reward in amygdala, insula, caudate are predictors of pleasure sensitivity to d-Amphetamine administration.
Academic Article Stability of acute responses to drugs in humans across repeated testing: Findings with alcohol and amphetamine.
Grant DRUGS OF ABUSE ON REGIONAL CEREBRAL METABOLISM AND MOOD
Grant Is Ecstasy an Empathogen? Effects of MDMA on Social and Emotional Processing
Academic Article Stimulant-like subjective effects of alcohol are not related to resting-state connectivity in healthy men.
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  • Individuality