Memory Deficits Sociology of Treatment Ion Channels Early Problem Drinking
First Statement of Responsibility
edited by Marc Galanter.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
Boston, MA
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Springer US : Imprint : Springer
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
1987
SERIES
Series Title
Recent developments in alcoholism, 5.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
I. Alcohol and Memory --;1 The Chronic Effects of Alcohol on Memory: A Contrast between a Unitary and Dual System Approach --;2 The Etiology and Neuropathology of Alcoholic Korsakoff's Syndrome: Some Evidence for the Role of the Basal Forebrain --;3 Cognitive Deficits Related to Memory Impairments in Alcoholism --;4 Specificity of Memory Deficits in Alcoholism --;5 Ethanol Intoxication and Memory: Recent Developments and New Directions --;II. Alcohol Treatment and Society --;6 Inebriety, Doctors, and the State: Alcoholism Treatment Institutions before 1940 --;7 Sociological Perspectives on the Alcoholism Treatment Literature since 1940 --;8 The Social Ecology of Alcohol Treatment in the United States --;9 The Great Controlled-Drinking Controversy --;III. The Effects of Ethanol on Ion Channels --;10 Calcium Channels: Interactions with Ethanol and Other Sedative-Hypnotic Drugs --;11 Effects of Ethanol on the Functional Properties of Sodium Channels in Brain Synaptosomes --;12 Involvement of Neuronal Chloride Channels in Ethanol Intoxication, Tolerance, and Dependence --;13 The Effects of Ethanol on the Electrophysiology of Calcium Channels --;14 The Electrophysiology of Potassium Channels --;IV. Hazardous and Early Problem Drinking --;15 Studying Drinking Problems Rather than Alcoholism --;16 Social Drinking as a Health and Psychosocial Risk Factor: Anstie's Limit Revisited --;17 Methods of Intervention to Modify Drinking Patterns in Heavy Drinkers --;18 Techniques to Modify Hazardous Drinking Patterns --;19 Alcohol-Related Hazardous Behavior among College Students.
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
From the President of the Research Society on Alcoholism In recent years, increasingly convincing evidence in support of a biobehavioral conceptual model of the etiology of alcoholism has emerged.