W.B. Gunning
University of Amsterdam
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Featured researches published by W.B. Gunning.
Acta Paediatrica | 1994
Reinout W. Wiers; J.A. Sergeant; W.B. Gunning
The background and rationale of a recently started project of the Amsterdam Institute for Addiction Research are outlined. This project is aimed at the psychological mechanisms underlying an enhanced risk of (later) addiction in children of alcoholics and the relationship with childhood psychopathology. A dual pathway mechanism is proposed, in which the type of alcoholism of the parent plays a major role. The child of a multigenerational primary alcoholic parent may suffer from an inherited mild dysfunction of the prefrontal cortex, expressed in neuropsychological and personality characteristics similar to those of the alcoholic parent. These are impulsive, aggressive and reward‐seeking behaviour, response perseveration and, in some children, related psychopathology such as conduct disorders. For a child of a secondary alcoholic parent, another mechanism is proposed. In these children, stress and social learning may lead to negative affectivity and repressive coping style, with emotional problems at a later age, and the risk of falling into the “circle of secondary alcoholism”. In both pathways, alcohol‐related expectancies are suggested to constitute a “final common pathway” between different risk factors and later alcohol abuse. Specific expectancies might be related to different pathways and to gender differences in later drinking patterns.
Acta Paediatrica | 1994
Odin van der Stelt; W.B. Gunning; J. Snel; E.J. Zeef; A. Kok
Recent studies on biological markers and risk factors for alcoholism have distinguished between nonalcoholic individuals with a family history of alcoholism and those without such a family history on measures of event‐related brain potentials. The main finding of these “high‐risk” studies is a smaller amplitude of the P300 component in males with a history of paternal alcoholism. This relationship between P300 amplitude and a family history of paternal alcoholism has been observed in adults and children. Consequently, several authors have suggested that a reduced P300 amplitude could serve as a vulnerability marker for alcoholism. We address several conceptual and methodological issues involved in the study of event‐related potentials in children at high risk for alcoholism. Subsequently, the ongoing high‐risk study of the Amsterdam Institute for Addiction Research is described briefly.
Acta Paediatrica | 1994
W.B. Gunning; Se Pattiselanno; Odin van der Stelt; Rw Wiers
Children of alcoholics have a higher risk of psychopathology and alcoholism. Therefore, in 1993 the Amsterdam Institute for Addiction Research initiated a study on vulnerability markers and risk factors in children of alcoholics, aimed at identifying predictors for the development of psychopathology and addiction in children of alcoholics. This article provides a summary of the background, rationales and aims of the study. With more specific and sensitive biological vulnerability markers that indicate risk status, more effective preventive interventions might become available. The biochemical part of the study aims at answering the question whether adenylate cyclase is a vulnerability marker for alcoholism. The psychophysiological part is directed at event‐related potentials during task performance to clarify the nature of the brain and cognitive functions that may underlie or relate to vulnerability to alcoholism. The third part, the psychological component, aims at possible psychological mechanisms of enhanced risk of addition in children of alcoholics as well as the relationship with childhood psychopathology.
Acta Paediatrica | 1994
Se Pattiselanno; W.B. Gunning; A. N. M. Schoffelmeer
A possible biochemical vulnerability (trait) marker is examined in a cross‐sectional study to determine the biochemical factors associated with the development of alcoholism in a population of non‐adult children of alcoholics. The activity of adenylate cyclase, an enzyme that plays a role in the signal transduction pathway of several hormones and neurotransmitters, is assessed in blood platelets. This activity was reported to be lower in blood cells of alcoholics and abstinent alcoholics compared with that in controls. In addition, dysregulation of adenylate cyclase in the CNS of animals seems to be involved in drug‐seeking behaviour. The relation between these biochemical findings and psycho‐pathology is currently being investigated in a project by the Amsterdam Institute for Addiction Research.
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 1998
O. van der Stelt; W.B. Gunning; J. Snel; A. Kok
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 1996
O. van der Stelt; W.B. Gunning; J. Snel; A. Kok
Advances in Psychophysiology | 1999
O. van der Stelt; W.B. Gunning; J. Snel; A. Kok
Journal of Psychophysiology | 1998
O. van der Stelt; A. Kok; Fren T.Y. Smulders; W.B. Gunning; J. Snel
Alcohol Research | 1998
O. van der Stelt; R.H.J. Geesken; W.B. Gunning; J. Snel; A. Kok
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 1997
Reinout W. Wiers; Joseph A. Sergeant; W.B. Gunning