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Nicholas B. Allen

Researcher at University of Oregon

Publications -  447
Citations -  27469

Nicholas B. Allen is an academic researcher from University of Oregon. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Anxiety. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 409 publications receiving 22281 citations. Previous affiliations of Nicholas B. Allen include University of Western Australia & Royal Melbourne Hospital.

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Accuracy of Consumer Wearable Heart Rate Measurement During an Ecologically Valid 24-Hour Period: Intraindividual Validation Study

TL;DR: Preliminary support is provided that these devices appear to be useful for implementing ambulatory measurement of cardiac activity in research studies, especially those where the specific advantages of these methods are particularly suited to the population or research question.
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Prenatal and perinatal influences on risk for psychopathology in childhood and adolescence.

TL;DR: Prenatal and perinatal events investigated included maternal experiences, health, and substance use during pregnancy, obstetric complications, feeding practices, and infant health during the first year of life.
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Nature's clocks and human mood: the circadian system modulates reward motivation.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the circadian system modulates reward activation, and implications for models of normal and abnormal mood are discussed.
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Orbitofrontal Volumes in Early Adolescence Predict Initiation of Cannabis Use: A 4-Year Longitudinal and Prospective Study

TL;DR: The findings suggest that structural abnormalities in the orbitofrontal cortex might contribute to risk for cannabis exposure, and further research is needed to understand their relationship with heavier patterns of use in adulthood as well as later abuse of other substances.
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Responsiveness to drug cues and natural rewards in opiate addiction: associations with later heroin use.

TL;DR: Heroin users demonstrated reduced responsiveness to natural reinforcers across a range of psychophysiological measures, and subjective rating of pleasant pictures robustly predicted future heroin use.