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Dive into the research topics where Gary J. Badger is active.

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Featured researches published by Gary J. Badger.


Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology | 1997

Impulsive and Self-Control Choices in Opiate-Dependent Patients and Non-Drug-Using Control Participants: Drug and Monetary Rewards

Gregory J. Madden; Nancy M. Petry; Gary J. Badger; Warren K. Bickel

Delay discounting was investigated in opioid-dependent and non-drug-using control participants. The latter participants were matched to the former on age, gender, education, and IQ. Participants in both groups chose between hypothetical monetary rewards available either immediately or after a delay. Delayed rewards were


Pediatrics | 2012

Mortality and Neonatal Morbidity Among Infants 501 to 1500 Grams From 2000 to 2009

Jeffrey D. Horbar; Joseph H. Carpenter; Gary J. Badger; Michael J. Kenny; Roger F. Soll; Kate A. Morrow; Jeffrey S. Buzas

1,000, and the immediate-reward amount was adjusted until choices reflected indifference. This procedure was repeated at each of 7 delays (1 week to 25 years). Opioid-dependent participants were given a second series of choices between immediate and delayed heroin, using the same procedures (i.e., the amount of delayed heroin was that which could be purchased with


Journal of Biomechanics | 2001

The effect of weightbearing and external loading on anterior cruciate ligament strain

Braden C. Fleming; Per Renström; Bruce D. Beynnon; Björn Engström; Glenn D. Peura; Gary J. Badger; Robert J. Johnson

1,000). Opioid-dependent participants discounted delayed monetary rewards significantly more than did non-drug-using participants. Furthermore opioid-dependent participants discounted delayed heroin significantly more than delayed money.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2000

Contingent reinforcement increases cocaine abstinence during outpatient treatment and 1 year of follow-up

Stephen T. Higgins; Conrad J. Wong; Gary J. Badger; Doris Ogden

OBJECTIVE: To identify changes in mortality and neonatal morbidities for infants with birth weight 501 to 1500 g born from 2000 to 2009. METHODS: There were 355 806 infants weighing 501 to 1500 g who were born in 2000–2009. Mortality during initial hospitalization and major neonatal morbidity in survivors (early and late infection, chronic lung disease, necrotizing enterocolitis, severe retinopathy of prematurity, severe intraventricular hemorrhage, and periventricular leukomalacia) were assessed by using data from 669 North American hospitals in the Vermont Oxford Network. RESULTS: From 2000 to 2009, mortality for infants weighing 501 to 1500 g decreased from 14.3% to 12.4% (difference, −1.9%; 95% confidence interval, −2.3% to −1.5%). Major morbidity in survivors decreased from 46.4% to 41.4% (difference, −4.9%; 95% confidence interval, −5.6% to −4.2%). In 2009, mortality ranged from 36.6% for infants 501 to 750 g to 3.5% for infants 1251 to 1500 g, whereas major morbidity in survivors ranged from 82.7% to 18.7%. In 2009, 49.2% of all very low birth weight infants and 89.2% of infants 501 to 750 g either died or survived with a major neonatal morbidity. CONCLUSIONS: Mortality and major neonatal morbidity in survivors decreased for infants with birth weight 501 to 1500 g between 2000 and 2009. However, at the end of the decade, a high proportion of these infants still either died or survived after experiencing ≥1 major neonatal morbidity known to be associated with both short- and long-term adverse consequences.


Psychopharmacology | 2002

Mild opioid deprivation increases the degree that opioid-dependent outpatients discount delayed heroin and money

Louis A. Giordano; Warren K. Bickel; George Loewenstein; Eric A. Jacobs; Lisa A. Marsch; Gary J. Badger

A force balance between the ligaments, articular contact, muscles and body weight maintains knee joint stability. Thus, it is important to study anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) biomechanics, in vivo, under weightbearing conditions. Our objective was to compare the ACL strain response under weightbearing and non-weightbearing conditions and in combination with three externally applied loadings: (1) anterior-posterior shear forces, (2) internal-external torques, and (3) varus-valgus moments. A strain transducer was implanted on the ACL of 11 subjects. All joint loadings were performed with the knee at 20 degrees of flexion. A significant increase in ACL strain was observed as the knee made the transition from non-weightbearing to weightbearing. During anterior shear loading, the strain values produced during weightbearing were greater than those of the non-weightbearing knee (shear loads <40N). At higher shear loads, the strain values became equal. During axial torsion, an internal torque of 10Nm strained the ACL when the knee was non-weightbearing while an equivalent external torque did not. Weightbearing significantly increased ACL strain values in comparison to non-weightbearing with the application of external torques and low internal torques (<3Nm). The strains became equal for higher internal torques. For V-V loading, the ACL was not strained in the non-weightbearing knee. However, weightbearing increased the ACL strain values over the range of moments tested. These data have important clinical ramifications in the development of rehabilitation protocols following ACL reconstruction since weightbearing has been previously thought to provide a protective mechanism to the healing graft.


Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2007

Delay discounting predicts postpartum relapse to cigarette smoking among pregnant women.

Jin H. Yoon; Stephen T. Higgins; Sarah H. Heil; Rena J. Sugarbaker; Colleen S. Thomas; Gary J. Badger

This study assessed whether contingent incentives can be used to reinforce cocaine abstinence in dependent outpatients. Seventy cocaine-dependent outpatients were randomized into 2 conditions. All participants received 24 weeks of treatment and 1 year of follow-up. The treatment provided to all participants combined counseling based on the community reinforcement approach with incentives in the form of vouchers exchangeable for retail items. In 1 condition, incentives were delivered contingent on cocaine-free urinalysis results, whereas in the other condition incentives were delivered independent of urinalysis results. Abstinence-contingent incentives significantly increased cocaine abstinence during treatment and 1 year of follow-up compared with noncontingent incentives.


The FASEB Journal | 2002

Evidence of connective tissue involvement in acupuncture

Helene M. Langevin; David L. Churchill; Junru Wu; Gary J. Badger; Jason A. Yandow; James R. Fox; Martin H. Krag

HeadingAbstractRationale. A growing literature suggests that excessive temporal discounting of delayed rewards may be a contributing factor in the etiology of substance abuse problems. Little is known, however, about how drug deprivation may affect temporal discounting of delayed rewards by drug-dependent individuals.Objective. To examine the extent to which opioid deprivation affects how opioid-dependent individuals discount small, medium and large quantities of delayed heroin and money.Methods. Thirteen opioid-dependent individuals maintained on buprenorphine completed a hypothetical choice task in which they choose between a constant delayed reward amount and an immediate reward amount that was adjusted until they expressed indifference between both outcomes. The task was completed for three values of heroin and money rewards during eight sessions under conditions of opioid deprivation (four sessions) and satiation (four sessions).Results. Across conditions, hyperbolic functions provided a good fit for the discounting data. Degree of discounting was significantly higher when subjects were opioid deprived. Consistent with previous findings, degree of discounting was higher for heroin than money and inversely related to the magnitude of the reward.Conclusion. Opioid deprivation increased the degree to which dependent individuals discounted delayed heroin and money. Understanding the conditions that affect how drug-dependent individuals discount delayed rewards might help us understand the myopic choices made by such individuals and help improve treatment outcomes.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2005

Maternal Smoking and Its Association With Birth Weight

Ira M. Bernstein; Joan A. Mongeon; Gary J. Badger; Laura J. Solomon; Sarah H. Heil; Stephen T. Higgins

Delay discounting (DD), a measure of impulsivity, describes the rate at which rewards lose value as the delay to their receipt increases. Greater discounting has been associated with cigarette smoking and various other types of drug abuse in recent research. The present study examined whether DD predicts treatment outcome among cigarette smokers. More specifically, the authors examined whether baseline discounting for hypothetical monetary rewards predicted smoking status at 24 weeks postpartum among women who discontinued smoking during pregnancy. Participants were 48 pregnant women (10.5 = 4.1 weeks gestational age at study entry) who participated in a clinical trial examining the use of incentives to prevent postpartum relapse. Several sociodemographic characteristics (being younger, being less educated, and reporting a history of depression) assessed at study entry were associated with increased baseline DD, but in multivariate analyses only DD predicted smoking status at 24 weeks postpartum. Greater baseline DD was a significant predictor of smoking status at 24 weeks postpartum. DD was reassessed periodically throughout the study and did not significantly change over time among those who eventually resumed smoking or those who sustained abstinence. The results extend the association of DD with risk for substance abuse to pregnant and recently postpartum cigarette smokers and demonstrate a significant relationship between DD and treatment outcome.


Fertility and Sterility | 1990

A randomized, controlled trial of clomiphene citrate and intrauterine insemination in couples with unexplained infertility or surgically corrected endometriosis

Jeffrey L. Deaton; Mark Gibson; Kathryn M. Blackmer; Steven T. Nakajima; Gary J. Badger; John R. Brumsted

Acupuncture needle manipulation gives rise to “needle grasp,” a biomechanical phenomenon characterized by an increase in the force necessary to pull the needle out of the tissue (pullout force). This study investigates the hypothesis that winding of connective tissue, rather than muscle contraction, is the mechanism responsible for needle grasp. We performed 1) measurements of pullout force in humans with and without needle penetration of muscle; 2) measurements of pullout force in anesthetized rats, with and without needle rotation, followed by measurements of connective tissue volume surrounding the needle; 3) imaging of rat abdominal wall explants, with and without needle rotation, using ultrasound scanning acoustic microscopy. We found 1) no evidence that increased penetration of muscle results in greater pullout force than increased penetration of subcutaneous tissue; 2) that both pullout force and subcutaneous tissue volume were increased by needle rotation; 3) that increased periodic architectural order was present in subcutaneous tissue with rotation, compared with no rotation. These data support connective tissue winding as the mechanism responsible for the increase in pullout force induced by needle rotation. Winding may allow needle movements to deliver a mechanical signal into the tissue and may be key to acupunctures therapeutic mechanism.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2000

Needle sharing in opioid-dependent outpatients: psychological processes underlying risk

Amy Laurie Odum; Gregory J. Madden; Gary J. Badger; Warren K. Bickel

OBJECTIVE: Maternal smoking has been associated with a reduction in newborn birth weight. We sought to estimate how the pattern of maternal smoking throughout pregnancy influences newborn size. METHODS: One hundred sixty pregnant smoking women were enrolled in a prospective study. We collected data on maternal age, education, prepregnancy body mass index, and parity, as well as alcohol and illicit drug use. Cigarette use was defined as self-reported consumption before pregnancy, at the time of study enrollment, and in the third trimester. Statistical analyses were performed based on bivariate correlations and multiple linear regression. RESULTS: Of the smoking parameters examined, maternal third-trimester cigarette consumption was the strongest predictor of birth weight percentile (partial r = –0.23, P < .001). For each additional cigarette per day that a participant smoked in the third trimester, there was an estimated 27 g reduction in birth weight. Prepregnancy smoking volume was not significantly associated with birth weight percentile in bivariate (r = –0.06, P = .47) or multivariable analyses. Additional factors contributing to birth weight include gestational age (partial r = 0.69, P < .001), maternal body mass index (partial r = 0.23, P < .001), and parity (partial r = 0.16, P < .004). In total, these 4 variables explain 61% of the variance in newborn birth weight. CONCLUSION: Maternal third-trimester cigarette consumption is a strong and independent predictor of birth weight percentile. This supports the hypothesis that reductions in maternal cigarette consumption during pregnancy will result in improved birth weight, regardless of the prepregnancy consumption levels. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: III

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Helene M. Langevin

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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