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Justin C. Strickland

Researcher at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Publications -  152
Citations -  2208

Justin C. Strickland is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Cannabis. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 109 publications receiving 1215 citations. Previous affiliations of Justin C. Strickland include University of Kentucky College of Arts and Sciences & Johns Hopkins University.

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The use of crowdsourcing in addiction science research: Amazon Mechanical Turk.

TL;DR: The utility of crowdsourcing, broadly, and MTurk, specifically, for conducting research relevant to substance use and misuse and combinations of these methodological approaches could help improve the rigor, reproducibility, and overall scope of research conducted in addiction science.
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Unique prediction of cannabis use severity and behaviors by delay discounting and behavioral economic demand.

TL;DR: Among cannabis users, regression analyses indicated that cannabis delay discounting uniquely predicted use severity, whereas cannabis demand uniquely predictedUse frequency and quantity, and these effects remained significant after controlling for otherdelay discounting and demand measures.
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A nationally representative analysis of “twin epidemics”: Rising rates of methamphetamine use among persons who use opioids

TL;DR: Data corroborating evidence of emergent concerns related to methamphetamine use in the US is provided, highlighting the importance of considering global drivers of substance use to avoid cyclic waves of new and emerging substance use crises.
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Rejecting impulsivity as a psychological construct: A theoretical, empirical, and sociocultural argument

TL;DR: It is strongly recommended that psychological scientists and neuroscientists reject the language of impulsivity in favor of a specific focus on the several well-defined and empirically supported factors that impulsivity is purported to cover.
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The effects of sex, estrous cycle, and social contact on cocaine and heroin self-administration in rats

TL;DR: The data suggest that drug self-administration in males is only minimally influenced by the hormonal status of a female partner, as well as illustrating that heroin self-Administration is reduced in females during proestrus regardless of the social context tested.