David B. Newlin
Purdue University
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Featured researches published by David B. Newlin.
Psychopharmacology | 1986
David B. Newlin
An autonomic response opposite in direction to the effect of alcohol (i.e., a conditioned compensatory response) was found in normal social drinkers given alcohol placebo. Seven males received placebo in a distinctive drinking room after receiving vodka and tonic in two sessions in the same room; seven more males received distilled water in three sessions in that room. The response to placebo, consisting of decreased pulse transit time and finger skin temperature, was antagonistic to alcohol. The results support the application of the classical conditioning model of alcoholism to humans.
International Journal of Neuroscience | 1982
David B. Newlin; Charles J. Golden; Merton A. Quaife; Benjamin Graber
Regional distribution of cerebral blood flow was assessed in 10 normal social drinkers following consumption of .75 g/kg alcohol and in a control session without alcohol. Alcohol increased blood flow in the gray matter in all brain areas except the left anterior area. The results are discussed in terms of the effect of alcohol on regional cerebral activation.
Archives of Sexual Behavior | 1985
Benjamin Graber; John W. Rohrbaugh; David B. Newlin; Jerald L. Varner; Robert J. Ellingson
The occurrence of a distinctive EEG pattern specifically related to sexual arousal and orgasm would provide a reliable and convenient means of identifying such events in the laboratory and would also provide clues to cerebral structures involved in the processes.EEG-polygraph recordings were obtained under rigorously controlled conditions in four normal male subjects during masturbation and ejaculation. The EEG data were subjected to both impressionistic and quantitative analyses. They showed no remarkable changes during the sequence of relevant physiological responses. The sole effect was a slight depression of alpha activity, a well-known nonspecific effect associated with changes in attention and arousal. Examination of the literature shows little agreement among reported results of studies of EEG changes during orgasm. It is likely that at least some reported changes were artifactual. It is concluded that the case for the existence of EEG changes specifically related to sexual arousal and orgasm remains unproven.
Alcohol | 1985
David B. Newlin
Alcohol cues elicited a conditioned autonomic response that was opposite in direction to the effect of alcohol. Normal male social drinkers given placebo following four alcohol conditioning sessions showed a compensatory response consisting of decreased pulse transit time, vasomotor activity, and finger temperature. This pilot research, supports the application of a classical conditioning model to human alcohol problems.
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 1991
David B. Newlin; James B. Thomson
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 1990
David B. Newlin; Mary Beth Pretorius
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 1985
David B. Newlin
Archive | 1982
Charles J. Golden; T. A. Hammeke; Arnold D. Purisch; Richard A. Berg; James A. Moses; David B. Newlin; Greta N. Wilkening; Antonio E. Puente
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 1989
David B. Newlin
Advances in alcohol and substance abuse | 1987
David B. Newlin