E-Book, Englisch, Band Volume 4, 306 Seiten, Web PDF
Thompson / Dews / Barrett Advances in Behavioral Pharmacology
1. Auflage 2013
ISBN: 978-1-4832-1492-4
Verlag: Elsevier Science & Techn.
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
E-Book, Englisch, Band Volume 4, 306 Seiten, Web PDF
Reihe: Advances in Behavioral Pharmacology
ISBN: 978-1-4832-1492-4
Verlag: Elsevier Science & Techn.
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Advances in Behavioral Pharmacology, Volume 4 covers papers about the advances in behavioral pharmacology. The book presents papers on the behavioral mechanisms of drug dependence; the effects of food deprivation on drug-reinforced behavior across most types of drugs abused by humans, routes of self-administration and species; and a biobehavioral approach to treatment of amphetamine addiction. The text also describes the behavioral effects of nicotine in human and infrahuman studies; the behavioral pharmacology of cigarette smoking; the problems and perspectives in the behavioral toxicity of lead; and the use of discriminative behavior as an index of toxicity. Behavioral pharmacologists, psychiatrists, pharmacologists, psychologists, physicians, and students taking these courses will find the book invaluable.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
1;Front Cover
;1
2;Advances in Behavioral Pharmacology
;4
3;Copyright Page
;5
4;Table of Contents
;6
5;Contributors;10
6;Erratum;12
7;Contents of Previous Volumes;14
8;Chapter 1. Behavioral Mechanismsof Drug Dependence
;18
8.1;I. INTRODUCTION;19
8.2;II. DRUGS MAY ALTER THE WAY ANTECEDENT
FACTORS MODULATE CURRENT BEHAVIOR;23
8.3;III. DRUGS MAY BE INVOLVED IN PROCESSES OF STIMULUS CONTROL
;31
8.4;IV. BEHAVIORAL LOCUS OF DRUG ACTION;37
8.5;V. DRUGS MAY BE INVOLVED IN PROCESSES BY WHICH CONSEQUENCES REGULATE BEHAVIOR
;43
8.6;VI. CONCLUDING REMARKS;55
8.7;ACKNOWLEDGMENTS;56
8.8;REFERENCES;56
9;Chapter 2. Increased Drug-Reinforced Behavior due to Food Deprivation
;64
9.1;I. INTRODUCTION;65
9.2;II. HISTORY AND GENERALITY OF THE FOOD DEPRIVATION EFFECT
;66
9.3;III. CHARACTERISTICS OF THE FOOD DEPRIVATION EFFECT
;67
9.4;IV. EXPLORING MECHANISMS OF THE FOOD DEPRIVATION EFFECT
;74
9.5;V. LIMITATIONS OF THE FOOD
DEPRIVATION EFFECT;78
9.6;VI. VARIABLES THAT MODIFY THE FOOD DEPRIVATION EFFECT
;80
9.7;VII. INDIRECT EFFECTS OF FOOD DEPRIVATION ON
DRUG-SEEKING BEHAVIOR;91
9.8;VIII. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS;95
9.9;ACKNOWLEDGMENTS;98
9.10;REFERENCES;98
10;Chapter 3. A Biobehavioral Approach to Treatment of Amphetamine Addiction: A Four-Way Integration
;106
10.1;I. INTRODUCTION;106
10.2;II. AMPHETAMINE AND THE BEHAVIORAL DRUG ACTIONS CONTINUUM
;107
10.3;III. AMPHETAMINE AND THE RATE DEPENDENCY HYPOTHESIS
;108
10.4;IV. STIMULUS PROPERTIES OF DRUGS;108
10.5;V. PRIOR HISTORY;109
10.6;VI. THREE THEORIES AND A PROBLEM;110
10.7;VII. TOXICITY, TOLERANCE, AND OVERDOSE;111
10.8;VIII. TOXICITY AND PATTERNS OF SELF-ADMINISTRATION
;111
10.9;IX. AMPHETAMINE "ABUSE" AND DEMOGRAPHIC FACTORS
;112
10.10;X. TREATMENT PROBLEMS VERSUS RESEARCH PROBLEMS
;113
10.11;XI. A MULTIFACETED TREATMENT STRATEGY;114
10.12;XII. A MULTIFACETED TREATMENT PROGRAM;115
10.13;XIII. THE PROBLEM CALLED "GENERALIZABILITY";116
10.14;XIV. THE DELTA PROJECT;117
10.15;XV. IMPLICATIONS FOR THE FUTURE OF DRUG DEPENDENCE TREATMENT
;118
10.16;REFERENCES;119
11;Chapter 4. Behavioral Effects of Nicotine
;122
11.1;I. INTRODUCTION;122
11.2;II. HUMAN STUDIES;123
11.3;III. INFRAHUMAN STUDIES;128
11.4;IV. CONCLUSIONS;138
11.5;REFERENCES;140
12;Chapter 5. Behavioral Pharmacology of Cigarette Smoking
;148
12.1;I. INTRODUCTION;149
12.2;II. TOBACCO SMOKE;149
12.3;III. PHYSIOLOGIC VARIABLES;158
12.4;IV. ANIMAL BEHAVIORAL PHARMACOLOGY;167
12.5;V. HUMAN BEHAVIORAL PHARMACOLOGY;174
12.6;VI. A HYPOTHESIS OF CIGARETTE SMOKING;208
12.7;REFERENCES;215
13;Chapter 6. The Behavioral Toxicity of Lead: Problems and Perspectives
;228
13.1;I. INTRODUCTION;228
13.2;II. PROBLEMS;230
13.3;III. PERSPECTIVES;234
13.4;ACKNOWLEDGMENTS;267
13.5;REFERENCES;267
14;Chapter 7. Discriminative Behavior as an Index of Toxicity
;274
14.1;I. HOW DOES BEHAVIOR DIFFER FROM OTHER INDICATORS OF TOXICITY?
;274
14.2;II. DIFFERENT GOALS IN SCREENING THAN IN BASIC RESEARCH
;277
14.3;III. SPECIFIC SENSORY FUNCTIONS;277
14.4;IV. COMPLEX DISCRIMINATIVE FUNCTIONS;285
14.5;V. SUMMARY;294
14.6;ACKNOWLEDGMENTS;294
14.7;REFERENCES;295
15;Index;302