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Cecile A. Marczinski

Researcher at Northern Kentucky University

Publications -  51
Citations -  3027

Cecile A. Marczinski is an academic researcher from Northern Kentucky University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Binge drinking. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 51 publications receiving 2787 citations. Previous affiliations of Cecile A. Marczinski include University of Kentucky & University of Western Ontario.

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Clubgoers and their trendy cocktails: implications of mixing caffeine into alcohol on information processing and subjective reports of intoxication

TL;DR: Subjective measures of intoxication showed that coadministration of caffeine with alcohol reduced participants' perceptions of alcohol intoxication compared with administration of alcohol alone, which highlights the complexity of drug interactions between alcohol and caffeine.
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Alcohol mixed with energy drinks: consumption patterns and motivations for use in U.S. college students.

TL;DR: The consumption of AmEDs is common in U.S. college students andmotivations for using Am EDs include the reduction of the sedative effects of alcohol, an important interoceptive cue that one should stop drinking.
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Effects of energy drinks mixed with alcohol on behavioral control: Risks for college students consuming trendy cocktails

TL;DR: The mix of impaired behavioral inhibition and enhanced stimulation is a combination that may make AmED consumption riskier than alcohol consumption alone, and an energy drink appears to alter some of the objective and subjective impairing effects of alcohol, but not others.
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Preresponse cues reduce the impairing effects of alcohol on the execution and suppression of responses.

TL;DR: Alcohol had no effect on inhibition and execution when cues correctly signaled these actions and impaired inhibition and executed in a dose-dependent manner when cues incorrectly signaled actions, consistent with a resource limitation account of alcohol impairment.
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A longitudinal study of language decline in Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia.

TL;DR: The Western Aphasia Battery was administered to 105 AD, 20 FTD-bv, 54 PPA, and 10 SD patients on 2 occasions with approximately 1 year between assessments as discussed by the authors.