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Diana Fishbein
Researcher at Pennsylvania State University
Publications - 112
Citations - 2798
Diana Fishbein is an academic researcher from Pennsylvania State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Substance abuse. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 100 publications receiving 2525 citations. Previous affiliations of Diana Fishbein include Research Triangle Park & National Institutes of Health.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Risky decision making and the anterior cingulate cortex in abstinent drug abusers and nonusers.
Diana Fishbein,Diana Eldreth,Christopher Hyde,John A. Matochik,Edythe D. London,Carlo Contoreggi,Varughese Kurian,Alane S. Kimes,Andrew Breeden,Steven J. Grant +9 more
TL;DR: Both drug abusers and controls exhibited significant activations in a widespread network of brain regions, primarily in the frontal cortex, previously implicated in decision-making tasks, which underlie the abusers' tendency to choose risky outcomes.
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Impulsivity, aggression, and neuroendocrine responses to serotonergic stimulation in substance abusers
TL;DR: Baseline plasma prolactin levels were greater in the groups with higher levels of self-reported aggressiveness and impulsivity, and PRL and cortisol responses to fenfluramine were more strongly correlated with impulsivity than aggressiveness.
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Neuropsychological Function, Drug Abuse, and Violence A Conceptual Framework
TL;DR: In this paper, the prefrontal cortex dysfunction was found to contribute to traits often cited as precursors to both, for example, impulsivity, poor decision-making ability, disinhibition, and inability to assess consequences.
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Biological perspectives in criminology
TL;DR: In this paper, a multidisciplinary approach is proposed to predict, prevent, and manage antisocial behavior using behavioral genetics, physiological psychology, psychopharmacology, and endocrinology.
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Neurocognitive characterizations of Russian heroin addicts without a significant history of other drug use.
Diana Fishbein,Evgeny Krupitsky,Barbara Flannery,Doris J. Langevin,Georgiy Bobashev,E. Verbitskaya,Cynthia B. Augustine,Karen I. Bolla,Edwin Zvartau,Barry Schech,Valentina Y. Egorova,N. Bushara,Marina Tsoy +12 more
TL;DR: The primary finding was that heroin addicts exhibited significantly more disadvantageous decision making and longer deliberation times while making risky decisions than the other groups.