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Neal Doran

Researcher at University of California, San Diego

Publications -  95
Citations -  2141

Neal Doran is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Smoking cessation. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 79 publications receiving 1893 citations. Previous affiliations of Neal Doran include Veterans Health Administration & University of Illinois at Chicago.

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Social facilitation expectancies for smoking: Psychometric properties of a new measure

TL;DR: Higher SFE scores were observed among those with greater smoking experience and higher scores were associated with greater endorsement of other smoking-related beliefs, providing support for the sound psychometric properties of this measure for use with young adult college students.
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JUUL E-Cigarette Quit Attempts and Cessation Perceptions in College Student JUUL E-Cigarette Users.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the frequency of JUUL e-cigarette quit attempts and identify characteristics associated with confidence in quitting and perceived difficulty in quitting, and identify the factors associated with the perceived difficulty of quitting.
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Co-occurring Use of Cannabis and Tobacco and the Presence of Acute Respiratory Symptoms among Young Adult Light and Intermittent Smokers.

TL;DR: Although co-occurring use of tobacco and cannabis by young adults may represent experimental use of multiple substances, it may also promote or exacerbate acute symptoms of respiratory illness.
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The effects of nicotine and cannabis co-use during adolescence and young adulthood on white matter cerebral blood flow estimates.

TL;DR: Results suggest that cannabis use by itself may be related to increased CBF in WM fiber tracts demonstrating poorer structural intergrity, yet the occurrence of even infrequent NTP use appears to diminish this relationship.
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Ambiguity and Consumer Perceptions of Risk in Various Areas of Biotechnology

TL;DR: This paper found that participants who reported greater aversion to ambiguity tended to respond in a way that signals the assignment of high risk, and low benefit, when presented with some unknown or uncertain risk.