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- Anxiety (1)
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- Chantix®; extinction learning; Pavlovian conditioning; smoking cessation; tobacco (1)
- Child Feeding Questionnaire; Feeding practices; Restriction; African American; Low-income; Validation (1)
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- Cigarette Smoking; College Students; Depression; Gender; Negative Affect Reduction; Smoking Expectancies (1)
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- Conditioned place preference; Pavlovian drug conditioning; learning; stimulant abuse; rat (1)
- Conditioned stimulus; discriminative stimulus; dopamine; drug discrimination; nicotinic acetylcholine receptors; hydroxybupropion; Pavlovian conditioning; Zyban (1)
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Articles 1 - 17 of 17
Full-Text Articles in Psychology
Scaling Up: Professional Development To Serve Young Children In Chinese Welfare Institutions, Carolyn P. Edwards, Janice N. Cotton, Wen Zhao, Jerònia Muntaner-Gelabert
Scaling Up: Professional Development To Serve Young Children In Chinese Welfare Institutions, Carolyn P. Edwards, Janice N. Cotton, Wen Zhao, Jerònia Muntaner-Gelabert
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
As senior program directors and field supervisors, we at Half the Sky Foundation asked ourselves, how can we empower children's welfare institution staff to provide nurture, enrichment, and education for all young children in state care? Creating an infrastructure for providing professional development was the first step. The HTS training infrastructure for early childhood includes international experts and a cadre of skilled Chinese teacher trainers, who together create a network of HTS teacher trainers (program directors and field supervisors for Infant Nurture and Little Sisters). In addition, Blue Sky model training centers-soon to number 31, one for each province of …
Subjective Anxiety And Behavioral Avoidance: Gender, Gender Role, And Perceived Confirmability Of Self-Report, Carmen P. Mclean, Debra A. Hope
Subjective Anxiety And Behavioral Avoidance: Gender, Gender Role, And Perceived Confirmability Of Self-Report, Carmen P. Mclean, Debra A. Hope
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
Commonly reported gender effects for differential vulnerability for anxiety may relate to gender socialization processes. The present study examined the relationship between gender role and fear under experimental conditions designed to elicit accurate fear reporting. Undergraduate students (N = 119) completed several self-report measures and a behavioral avoidance task (BAT) with a tarantula while wearing a heart rate monitor. Gender roles were operationalized as instrumentality and expressiveness, as measured by the Personal Attributes Questionnaire (Spence, Helmreich, & Stapp, 1975). As expected, women reported greater subjective anxiety and were more avoidant of the tarantula than men. Regardless of gender, low …
Automatic Thoughts And Cognitive Restructuring In Cognitive Behavioral Group Therapy For Social Anxiety Disorder, Debra A. Hope, James A. Burns, Sarah A. Hayes, James D. Herbert, Michelle D. Warner
Automatic Thoughts And Cognitive Restructuring In Cognitive Behavioral Group Therapy For Social Anxiety Disorder, Debra A. Hope, James A. Burns, Sarah A. Hayes, James D. Herbert, Michelle D. Warner
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
The goal in (Heimberg, R. G. [1991]. A manual for conducting Cognitive Behavior Group Therapy for social phobia (2nd ed.), unpublished manuscript) cognitive behavioral group therapy (CBGT) for social anxiety disorder (social phobia) is to challenge irrational automatic thoughts and create exposures to provide disconfirming evidence for these irrational thoughts as well as habituation to fearful stimuli. Yet little is known about the types of thoughts reported by socially anxious individuals in therapy or which thoughts therapists select for cognitive restructuring in CBGT sessions. The present study analyzed the semantic content of automatic thoughts reported in CBGT and found that …
Lgb-Affirmative Cognitive Behavioral Treatment For Social Anxiety: A Case Study Applying Evidence-Based Practice Principles, Kate Walsh, Debra A. Hope
Lgb-Affirmative Cognitive Behavioral Treatment For Social Anxiety: A Case Study Applying Evidence-Based Practice Principles, Kate Walsh, Debra A. Hope
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
Guided by the American Psychological Association’s principles of evidence-based practice, this article reviews a single-case treatment outcome study whereby a client characteristic, sexual identity, was integrated into the assessment and treatment of social anxiety symptoms. The case involved a young adult European-American male who presented to a training clinic with a primary diagnosis of social anxiety disorder as well as secondary symptoms of excessive worry and concerns of sexual identity confusion. Recent evidence suggests that gay men report more symptoms of social anxiety when compared to heterosexual men, and those who make more efforts to conceal their sexual identity experience …
Gender Moderates The Association Between 5-Httlpr And Decision-Making Under Ambiguity But Not Under Risk, Scott F. Stoltenberg, Joanna M. Vandever
Gender Moderates The Association Between 5-Httlpr And Decision-Making Under Ambiguity But Not Under Risk, Scott F. Stoltenberg, Joanna M. Vandever
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
Decisions made under ambiguity may involve a different genetic architecture than those made under risk. Because gender moderates the effect of genetic polymorphisms on serotonin function and because there are gender differences in decision-making, the present study examined potential gender moderation of associations between polymorphisms in important serotonin system candidate genes (serotonin transporter [SLC6A4] and tryptophan hydroxylase-2 [TPH2]) and performance on a decision-making task (Iowa Gambling Task, IGT) in healthy, adults (N = 188; 62% women). Subjects were genotyped for the well-studied SLC6A4 promoter variant 5-HTTLPR and a TPH2 single nucleotide polymorphism in intron-8 (rs1386438). Genotype at rs1386438was not …
Assessing School And Student Predictors Of Weapons Reporting, Lindsey E. Wylie, Chris L. Gibson, Eve M. Brank, Mark R. Fondacaro, Stephen W. Smith, Veda E. Brown, Scott A. Miller
Assessing School And Student Predictors Of Weapons Reporting, Lindsey E. Wylie, Chris L. Gibson, Eve M. Brank, Mark R. Fondacaro, Stephen W. Smith, Veda E. Brown, Scott A. Miller
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
School violence and weapons at school are a major concern for community members, school administrators, and policy makers. This research examines both student-level and school-level variables that predict middle school students’ willingness to report a weapon at school under several reporting conditions. Results substantiate previous analyses of these data that student-level variables explain students’ willingness to report a weapon but extend these findings to include school climate variables that affect willingness to report (i.e., collective identity and conflict). School climate variables were also shown to influence reporting under conditions in which there would be consequences for the weapons-carrying student or …
Examination Of The Construct Validity Of Impact™ Computerized Test, Traditional, And Experimental Neuropsychological Measures, A Maerlender, L Flashman, A Kessler, S Kumbhani, R Greenwald, T Tosteson, T Mcallister
Examination Of The Construct Validity Of Impact™ Computerized Test, Traditional, And Experimental Neuropsychological Measures, A Maerlender, L Flashman, A Kessler, S Kumbhani, R Greenwald, T Tosteson, T Mcallister
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
Although computerized neuropsychological screening is becoming a standard for sports concussion identification and management, convergent validity studies are limited. Such studies are important for several reasons: reference to established measures is needed to establish validity; examination of the computerized battery relative to a more traditional comprehensive battery will help understand the strengths and limitations of the computer battery; and such an examination will help inform the output of the computerized battery. We compared scores on the ImPACT™ battery to a comprehensive battery of traditional neuropsychological measures and several experimental measures used in the assessment of sports-related concussion in fifty-four healthy …
Reference Place Conditioning Procedure With Cocaine: Increased Sensitivity For Measuring Associatively Motivated Choice Behavior In Rats, Carmela M. Reichel, Jamie L. Wilkinson, Rick A. Bevins
Reference Place Conditioning Procedure With Cocaine: Increased Sensitivity For Measuring Associatively Motivated Choice Behavior In Rats, Carmela M. Reichel, Jamie L. Wilkinson, Rick A. Bevins
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
Place conditioning is widely used to study the conditioned rewarding effects of drugs. In the standard version, one reward (cocaine) is compared to no reward (saline). A modified variant of this task, “reference-conditioning” procedure, compares two potentially rewarding stimuli (high versus low cocaine dose). There has been little research on the utility of this procedure. Experiment 1 used the standard protocol with saline administered before confinement to the reference compartment of a place-conditioning chamber. On alternating days, saline, 2.5, 5, 7.5, 10, or 20 mg/kg cocaine was administered before confinement to the opposite compartment. In Experiments 2 and 3, reference-compartment …
An Investigation Of Bupropion Substitution For The Interoceptive Stimulus Effects Of Nicotine, Jamie L. Wilkinson, F. Ivy Carroll, Rick A. Bevins
An Investigation Of Bupropion Substitution For The Interoceptive Stimulus Effects Of Nicotine, Jamie L. Wilkinson, F. Ivy Carroll, Rick A. Bevins
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
smoking cessation aid has not been fully elucidated, studies have found that bupropion and nicotine share behavioral and neurophysiological properties suggesting that bupropion might serve as a substitute for nicotine. In fact, bupropion prompts nicotine-appropriate responding in operant and Pavlovian drug discrimination studies with rats. A majority of the literature examining this substitution pattern has been done with an operant paradigm. The present research extended this literature by further characterizing the behavioral and neuropharmacological properties underlying the substitution for a nicotine conditioned stimulus (CS). Examination of the dose-effect function and temporal dynamics of this substitution pattern showed that bupropion (20 …
Extinction With Varenicline And Nornicotine, But Not Abt-418, Weakens Conditioned Responding Evoked By The Interoceptive Stimulus Effects Of Nicotine, Carmela M. Reichel, Jennifer E. Murray, Jessica D. Barr, Rick A. Bevins
Extinction With Varenicline And Nornicotine, But Not Abt-418, Weakens Conditioned Responding Evoked By The Interoceptive Stimulus Effects Of Nicotine, Carmela M. Reichel, Jennifer E. Murray, Jessica D. Barr, Rick A. Bevins
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
The interoceptive stimulus effects of nicotine acquire control over behavior. This observation, among others, suggests that the stimulus effects of nicotine are important in the development and tenacity of tobacco dependence. Despite this importance, there has been little research examining whether non-reinforced presentations (extinction) of a ligand that share stimulus effects of nicotine will weaken responding controlled by nicotine. Rats were trained to discriminate nicotine (0.4 mg/kg) from saline using a discriminated goal-tracking task in which nicotine signaled intermittent access to sucrose; sucrose was withheld on saline sessions. Experiment 1 examined substitution for nicotine by ABT-418, nornicotine, epibatidine, varenicline, or …
Depression Vulnerability Predicts Cigarette Smoking Among College Students: Gender And Negative Reinforcement Expectancies As Contributing Factors, Holly E.R. Morrell, Lee M. Cohen, Dennis E. Mcchargue
Depression Vulnerability Predicts Cigarette Smoking Among College Students: Gender And Negative Reinforcement Expectancies As Contributing Factors, Holly E.R. Morrell, Lee M. Cohen, Dennis E. Mcchargue
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
This study examined the association between vulnerability to depression and smoking behavior in college students in 1214 college students (54% female), and evaluated gender and expectancies of negative affect reduction as moderators or mediators of this relationship. Depression vulnerability predicted smoking in females, but not males. The relationship between depression vulnerability and smoking status was mediated by expectancies of negative affect reduction in females only. Female college students who are vulnerable to depression may smoke because they expect smoking to relieve negative affect. Smoking interventions for college females may increase in effectiveness by targeting depression and emphasizing mood regulation.
Parent-Child Relationships In Early Learning., Carolyn P. Edwards, Susan M. Sheridan Dr., Lisa Knoche
Parent-Child Relationships In Early Learning., Carolyn P. Edwards, Susan M. Sheridan Dr., Lisa Knoche
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
Parental behavior during a child’s first five years of life is critical for the development of important social and cognitive outcomes in children that set the stage for life-long adaptation and functioning. This chapter will review some of the key findings about the importance of parent-child relationships in early learning. Three dimensions of parent behavior will be described as “parental engagement”: (a) warmth and sensitivity, (b) support for a child’s emerging autonomy, and (c) active participation in learning. Cross cultural variations in which the styles of these behaviors are expressed are also considered, contrasting physical, social, and cognitive styles of …
Confirmatory Factor Analysis Of The Child Feeding Questionnaire Among Low-Income African American Families Of Preschool Children, Richard E. Boles, Timothy D. Nelson, Leigh A. Chamberlin, Jessica M. Valenzuela, Susan N. Sherman, Susan L. Johnson, Scott W. Powers
Confirmatory Factor Analysis Of The Child Feeding Questionnaire Among Low-Income African American Families Of Preschool Children, Richard E. Boles, Timothy D. Nelson, Leigh A. Chamberlin, Jessica M. Valenzuela, Susan N. Sherman, Susan L. Johnson, Scott W. Powers
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
This study examined the factor structure for three of the Child Feeding Questionnaire (CFQ) subscales, a widely used measure of parental feeding practices, among 296 low-income parents of African American preschool children. Confirmatory factor analysis showed an overall poor fit among CFQ subscales; Restriction, Pressure to Eat, and Concern about Child Weight, (χ2, (df = 87 = 300.249, CFI = 1.00, NNFI = 1.07, RMSEA = .091). Additionally, Cronbach’s Alpha coefficients for 2 of the three subscales were below acceptable recommendations (Restriction = 0.69; Pressure to Eat = 0.58). These results suggest further psychometric clarification is needed to understand commonly …
Shift And Deviate: Saccades Reveal That Shifts Of Covert Attention Evoked By Trained Spatial Stimuli Are Obligatory, Stefan Van Der Stigchel, Mark Mills, Michael D. Dodd
Shift And Deviate: Saccades Reveal That Shifts Of Covert Attention Evoked By Trained Spatial Stimuli Are Obligatory, Stefan Van Der Stigchel, Mark Mills, Michael D. Dodd
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
The premotor theory of attention predicts that motor movements, including manual movements and eye movements, are preceded by an obligatory shift of attention to the location of the planned response. We investigated whether the shifts of attention evoked by trained spatial cues (e.g., Dodd & Wilson, 2009) are obligatory by using an extreme prediction of the premotor theory: If individuals are trained to associate a color cue with a manual movement to the left or right, the shift of attention evoked by the color cue should also influence eye movements in an unrelated task. Participants were trained to associate an …
Examination Of The Construct Validity Of Impact™ Computerized Test, Traditional, And Experimental Neuropsychological Measures, Arthur C. Maerlender, L. Flashman, A. Kessler, S. Kumbhani, R. Greenwald, T. Tosteson, T. Mcallister
Examination Of The Construct Validity Of Impact™ Computerized Test, Traditional, And Experimental Neuropsychological Measures, Arthur C. Maerlender, L. Flashman, A. Kessler, S. Kumbhani, R. Greenwald, T. Tosteson, T. Mcallister
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
Although computerized neuropsychological screening is becoming a standard for sports concussion identification and management, convergent validity studies are limited. Such studies are important for several reasons: reference to established measures is needed to establish validity; examination of the computerized battery relative to a more traditional comprehensive battery will help understand the strengths and limitations of the computer battery; and such an examination will help inform the output of the computerized battery. We compared scores on the ImPACT™ battery to a comprehensive battery of traditional neuropsychological measures and several experimental measures used in the assessment of sports-related concussion in fifty-four healthy …
Cannabinoid Conditioned Reward And Aversion: Behavioral And Neural Processes, Jennifer E. Murray, Rick A. Bevins
Cannabinoid Conditioned Reward And Aversion: Behavioral And Neural Processes, Jennifer E. Murray, Rick A. Bevins
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
The discovery that delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol
(Δ9-THC) is the primary psychoactive ingredient in
marijuana prompted research that helped elucidate
the endogenous cannabinoid system of the brain.
Δ9-THC and other cannabinoid ligands with agonist
action (CP 55,940, HU210, and WIN 55,212-2)
increase firing of dopamine neurons and increase
synaptic dopamine in brain regions associated with
reward and drug addiction. Such changes in cellular
processes have prompted investigators to examine
the conditioned rewarding effects of the cannabinoid
ligands using the place conditioning task with rats and
mice. As reviewed here, these cannabinoid ligands
can condition place preferences (evidence for rewarding …
Short-Term Memory And Auditory Processing Disorders: Concurrent Validity And Clinical Diagnostic Markers, Arthur Maerlender
Short-Term Memory And Auditory Processing Disorders: Concurrent Validity And Clinical Diagnostic Markers, Arthur Maerlender
Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications
Auditory processing disorders (APDs) are of interest to educators and clinicians, as they impact school functioning. Little work has been completed to demonstrate how children with APDs perform on clinical tests. In a series of studies, standard clinical (psychometric) tests from the Wechsler Intel-ligence Scale for Children, Fourth Edition (WISC-IV) were used to establish concurrent validity be-tween tests of short-term auditory memory and two frequently used tests of auditory processing (Dichotic Digits and Frequency Patterns). The diagnostic utility of the short-term memory tests was also explored. In a matched sample, Digit Span forward predicted diagnosis of APD (sensitivity = .81, …