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Edythe D. London

Researcher at University of California, Los Angeles

Publications -  492
Citations -  36481

Edythe D. London is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nicotinic agonist & Methamphetamine. The author has an hindex of 93, co-authored 482 publications receiving 33741 citations. Previous affiliations of Edythe D. London include Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai & Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior.

Papers
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Pain, affective symptoms, and cognitive deficits in patients with cerebral dopamine dysfunction.

TL;DR: Clinical and potential therapeutic implications for patients with dopamine-related disorders and those with chronic pain syndromes are discussed, and the present review focuses on this relationship.
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Prefrontal hypoactivation during cognitive control in early abstinent methamphetamine-dependent subjects.

TL;DR: Preliminary findings suggest that hypofunction in cortical areas that are important for executive function underlies cognitive control deficits associated with MA dependence.
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Predicting risky choices from brain activity patterns

TL;DR: Functional MRI data used to predict choice behavior in subjects while they performed a naturalistic risk-taking task found choices on subsequent trials could be predicted with high accuracy when condensing each individual's brain activity to two values, indicating that choice behavior is encoded even in coarse activation patterns.
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Corticolimbic dysregulation and chronic methamphetamine abuse.

TL;DR: Cognitive deficits in abstinent methamphetamine abusers can affect a wide range of functions that can be important for success in maintaining drug abstinence, and potential therapies may combine behavioral approaches with medications that can improve cognitive control.
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PET studies of the influences of nicotine on neural systems in cigarette smokers.

TL;DR: The results indicate that nicotine influences brain regions involved in arousal and reward and suggest specific functional systems that may be linked to motivationally significant aspects of tobacco dependence.