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Yavin Shaham

Researcher at National Institute on Drug Abuse

Publications -  258
Citations -  32954

Yavin Shaham is an academic researcher from National Institute on Drug Abuse. The author has contributed to research in topics: Self-administration & Craving. The author has an hindex of 94, co-authored 239 publications receiving 29596 citations. Previous affiliations of Yavin Shaham include Concordia University Wisconsin & Concordia University.

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The reinstatement model of drug relapse: history, methodology and major findings.

TL;DR: The data derived from studies using the reinstatement model suggest that the neuronal events that mediate drug-, cue- and stress-induced reinstatement of drug seeking are not identical, and that the duration of the withdrawal period following cocaine and heroin self-administration has a profound effect on reinstatement induced by drug cues and stress.
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Neuroadaptation. Incubation of cocaine craving after withdrawal.

TL;DR: Behavioural evidence is provided from laboratory animals suggesting that the onset of craving is delayed and that craving does not decay, but rather increases progressively, over a two-month withdrawal period.
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Neurobiology of Relapse to Heroin and Cocaine Seeking: A Review

TL;DR: The main conclusion of this review is that the neuronal mechanisms involved in relapse to heroin and cocaine seeking induced by drug priming, drug cues, and stressors are to a large degree dissociable.
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Stress-induced relapse to heroin and cocaine seeking in rats: a review.

TL;DR: Using a reinstatement procedure, it is shown that exposure to intermittent footshock stress reliably reinstates heroin and cocaine seeking after prolonged drug-free periods.
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Toward a model of drug relapse: an assessment of the validity of the reinstatement procedure.

TL;DR: The reinstatement model has adequate criterion validity in the broad sense of the term, as evidenced by the fact that reinstatement in laboratory animals is induced by conditions reported to provoke relapse in humans.