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Dive into the research topics where E. Terry Mueller is active.

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Featured researches published by E. Terry Mueller.


Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2012

Excessive discounting of delayed reinforcers as a trans-disease process contributing to addiction and other disease-related vulnerabilities: emerging evidence.

Warren K. Bickel; David P. Jarmolowicz; E. Terry Mueller; Mikhail N. Koffarnus; Kirstin M. Gatchalian

Delay discounting describes the devaluation of a reinforcer as a function of the delay until its receipt. Although all people discount delayed reinforcers, one consistent finding is that substance-dependent individuals tend to discount delayed reinforcers more rapidly than do healthy controls. Moreover, these higher-than-normal discounting rates have been observed in individuals with other behavioral maladies such as pathological gambling, poor health behavior, and overeating. This suggests that high rates of delay discounting may be a trans-disease process (i.e., a process that occurs across a range of disorders, making findings from one disorder relevant to other disorders). In this paper, we argue that delay discounting is a trans-disease process, undergirded by an imbalance between two competing neurobehavioral decision systems. Implications for our understanding of, and treatment for, this trans-disease process are discussed.


Psychopharmacology | 2012

Are executive function and impulsivity antipodes? A conceptual reconstruction with special reference to addiction

Warren K. Bickel; David P. Jarmolowicz; E. Terry Mueller; Kirstin M. Gatchalian; Samuel M. McClure

RationaleAlthough there is considerable interest in how either executive function (EF) or impulsivity relate to addiction, there is little apparent overlap between these research areas.ObjectivesThe present paper aims to determine if components of these two constructs are conceptual antipodes—widely separated on a shared continuum.MethodsEFs and impulsivities were compared and contrasted. Specifically, the definitions of the components of EF and impulsivity, the methods used to measure the various components, the populations of drug users that show deficits in these components, and the neural substrates of these components were compared and contrasted.ResultsEach component of impulsivity had an antipode in EF. EF, however, covered a wider range of phenomena, including compulsivity.ConclusionsImpulsivity functions as an antipode of certain components of EF. Recognition of the relationship between EF and impulsivity may inform the scientific inquiry of behavioral problems such as addiction. Other theoretical implications are discussed.


Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior | 2013

CHANGING DELAY DISCOUNTING IN THE LIGHT OF THE COMPETING NEUROBEHAVIORAL DECISION SYSTEMS THEORY: A REVIEW

Mikhail N. Koffarnus; David P. Jarmolowicz; E. Terry Mueller; Warren K. Bickel

Excessively devaluing delayed reinforcers co-occurs with a wide variety of clinical conditions such as drug dependence, obesity, and excessive gambling. If excessive delay discounting is a trans-disease process that underlies the choice behavior leading to these and other negative health conditions, efforts to change an individuals discount rate are arguably important. Although discount rate is often regarded as a relatively stable trait, descriptions of interventions and environmental manipulations that successfully alter discount rate have begun to appear in the literature. In this review, we compare published examples of procedures that change discount rate and classify them into categories of procedures, including therapeutic interventions, direct manipulation of the executive decision-making system, framing effects, physiological state effects, and acute drug effects. These changes in discount rate are interpreted from the perspective of the competing neurobehavioral decision systems theory, which describes a combination of neurological and behavioral processes that account for delay discounting. We also suggest future directions that researchers could take to identify the mechanistic processes that allow for changes in discount rate and to test whether the competing neurobehavioral decision systems view of delay discounting is correct.


Current Psychiatry Reports | 2011

The Behavioral Economics and Neuroeconomics of Reinforcer Pathologies: Implications for Etiology and Treatment of Addiction

Warren K. Bickel; David P. Jarmolowicz; E. Terry Mueller; Kirstin M. Gatchalian

The current paper presents a novel approach to understanding and treating addiction. Drawing from work in behavioral economics and developments in the new field of neuroeconomics, we describe addiction as pathological patterns of responding resulting from the persistently high valuation of a reinforcer and/or an excessive preference for the immediate consumption of that reinforcer. We further suggest that, as indicated by the competing neurobehavioral decision systems theory, these patterns of pathological choice and consumption result from an imbalance between two distinct neurobehavioral systems. Specifically, pathological patterns of responding result from hyperactivity in the evolutionarily older impulsive system (which values immediate and low-cost reinforcers) and/or hypoactivity in the more recently evolved executive system (which is involved in the valuation of delayed reinforcers). This approach is then used to explain five phenomena that we believe any adequate theory of addiction must address.


Journal of Dual Diagnosis | 2009

Toward the Study of Trans-Disease Processes: A Novel Approach With Special Reference to the Study of Co-morbidity.

Warren K. Bickel; E. Terry Mueller

The objective of this article was to propose a novel approach, referred to as the study of trans-disease processes (TDPs), to the neuroscientific study of disease processes in general and to co-morbid diseases in particular. The features of this approach are outlined; one potential TDP—delay discounting, which may help account for the co-morbidity of cigarette smoking and schizophrenia—is explored; and the concept of TDPs is contrasted with the concept of endophenotypes. TDPs have the potential for a variety of positive impacts on science.


Appetite | 2014

Using crowdsourcing to compare temporal, social temporal, and probability discounting among obese and non-obese individuals

Warren K. Bickel; A. George Wilson; Christopher T. Franck; E. Terry Mueller; David P. Jarmolowicz; Mikhail N. Koffarnus; Samantha J. Fede

Previous research comparing obese and non-obese samples on the delayed discounting procedure has produced mixed results. The aim of the current study was to clarify these discrepant findings by comparing a variety of temporal discounting measures in a large sample of internet users (n=1163) obtained from a crowdsourcing service, Amazon Mechanical Turk (AMT). Measures of temporal, social-temporal (a combination of standard and social temporal), and probability discounting were obtained. Significant differences were obtained on all discounting measures except probability discounting, but the obtained effect sizes were small. These data suggest that larger-N studies will be more likely to detect differences between obese and non-obese samples, and may afford the opportunity, in future studies, to decompose a large obese sample into different subgroups to examine the effect of other relevant measures, such as the reinforcing value of food, on discounting.


Behavioural Processes | 2012

Using crowdsourcing to examine relations between delay and probability discounting

David P. Jarmolowicz; Warren K. Bickel; Anne E. Carter; Christopher T. Franck; E. Terry Mueller

Although the extensive lines of research on delay and/or probability discounting have greatly expanded our understanding of human decision-making processes, the relation between these two phenomena remains unclear. For example, some studies have reported robust associations between delay and probability discounting, whereas others have failed to demonstrate a consistent relation between the two. The current study sought to clarify this relation by examining the relation between delay and probability discounting in a large sample of internet users (n=904) using the Amazon Mechanical Turk (AMT) crowdsourcing service. Because AMT is a novel data collection platform, the findings were validated through the replication of a number of previously established relations (e.g., relations between delay discounting and cigarette smoking status). A small but highly significant positive correlation between delay and probability discounting rates was obtained, and principal component analysis suggested that two (rather than one) components were preferable to account for the variance in both delay and probability discounting. Taken together, these findings suggest that delay and probability discounting may be related, but are not manifestations of a single construct (e.g., impulsivity).


Current topics in behavioral neurosciences | 2010

The Behavioral Economics of Drug Dependence: Towards the Consilience of Economics and Behavioral Neuroscience

Warren K. Bickel; Richard Yi; E. Terry Mueller; Bryan A. Jones; Darren R. Christensen

In this chapter, we review the research in this growing field by first discussing the concepts related to price and consumption (demand), its applications to the study of drug consumption and drug seeking, and the impact of other commodities on drug consumption. We then review the discounting of future commodities and events among the addicted, review the most recent research examining the neural correlates of discounting, and describe and review the new theory of addiction that results from that research. We conclude by addressing the next research steps that these advances engender.


Addictive Behaviors | 2015

Predictors of delay discounting among smokers: Education level and a Utility Measure of Cigarette Reinforcement Efficacy are better predictors than demographics, smoking characteristics, executive functioning, impulsivity, or time perception

A. George Wilson; Christopher T. Franck; E. Terry Mueller; Reid D. Landes; Benjamin P. Kowal; Richard Yi; Warren K. Bickel

Ninety-four smokers completed the delay discounting procedure for either hypothetical amounts of money,


Archive | 2012

Toward a Computationally Unified Behavioral-Economic Model of Addiction

E. Terry Mueller; Laurence P. Carter; Warren K. Bickel

10 (money) and

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James MacKillop

St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton

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Benjamin P. Kowal

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Bryan A. Jones

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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