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Recent Developments in Alcoholism

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Cover of 'Recent Developments in Alcoholism'

Table of Contents

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    Book Overview
  2. Altmetric Badge
    Chapter 1 A Conditioning Model of Alcohol Tolerance
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    Chapter 2 Social models of drinking behavior in animals. The importance of individual differences.
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    Chapter 3 Social Correlates of Drinking in Contrived Situations
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    Chapter 4 Alcohol-Ingestive Habits
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    Chapter 5 Commentary on the Utility of Experimental Social and Learning Models of Alcoholism
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    Chapter 6 Alcohol-Induced Liver Injury
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    Chapter 7 Hypermetabolic State and Hypoxic Liver Damage
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    Chapter 8 Commentary on the Hypermetabolic State and the Role of Oxygen in Alcohol-Induced Liver Injury
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    Chapter 9 Alcohol-Induced Mitochondrial Changes in the Liver
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    Chapter 10 Effect of Ethanol on Hepatic Secretory Proteins
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    Chapter 11 Use of Colchicine and Steroids in the Treatment of Alcoholic Liver Disease
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    Chapter 12 Neurobiological Relationships between Aging and Alcohol Abuse
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    Chapter 13 Alcohol Consumption and Premature Aging
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    Chapter 14 Aging and Alcohol Problems
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    Chapter 15 Life Stressors and Problem Drinking among Older Adults
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    Chapter 16 Cross-Cultural Aspects of Alcoholism in the Elderly
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    Chapter 17 Ethnohistory and Alcohol Studies
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    Chapter 18 Social-Network Considerations in the Alcohol Field
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    Chapter 19 Alcohol Use in the Perspective of Cultural Ecology
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    Chapter 20 Selected Contexts of Anthropological Studies in the Alcohol Field
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    Chapter 21 Family Research and Alcoholism
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    Chapter 22 Alcoholism-Treatment-Center-Based Projects
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    Chapter 23 Cross-Cultural Studies of Alcohol Use
Attention for Chapter 2: Social models of drinking behavior in animals. The importance of individual differences.
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Chapter title
Social models of drinking behavior in animals. The importance of individual differences.
Chapter number 2
Book title
Recent Developments in Alcoholism
Published in
Recent developments in alcoholism an official publication of the American Medical Society on Alcoholism the Research Society on Alcoholism and the National Council on Alcoholism, January 1984
DOI 10.1007/978-1-4684-4661-6_2
Pubmed ID
Book ISBNs
978-1-4684-4663-0, 978-1-4684-4661-6
Authors

G D Ellison, A D Potthoff, Ellison, Gaylord D., Potthoff, Allen D.

Abstract

Although certain social environments clearly facilitate alcohol intake in humans, the role of social factors in alcohol consumption by animals is less clear. While social housing conditions such as crowding and isolation increase alcohol consumption in animals, in both cases this is mediated by heightened stress. Increases in social tension increase alcohol consumption in social groups of animals, but the literature is extremely variable in reports of how dominance correlates with alcohol consumption. Alcohol administration has biphasic effects on social behavior of animals similar to its biphasic effects on activity levels. We report a novel, social animal model of alcoholism. Rats raised over prolonged periods in highly enriched, social colony environments develop a variety of rhythms of alcohol consumption. But in each colony, only a few animals develop into extreme overconsumers of alcohol, and the proportion of colony-housed animals that develop such excessive alcohol -consumption habits is similar to the proportion of humans with alcohol problems. These overconsumers of alcohol from a rat colony show a variety of alterations in behavior, including chronic inactivity and low dominance standing. They represent a novel, voluntary animal model of social alcoholism.

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Attention Score in Context

This research output has an Altmetric Attention Score of 1. This is our high-level measure of the quality and quantity of online attention that it has received. This Attention Score, as well as the ranking and number of research outputs shown below, was calculated when the research output was last mentioned on 21 November 2013.
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Outputs from Recent developments in alcoholism an official publication of the American Medical Society on Alcoholism the Research Society on Alcoholism and the National Council on Alcoholism
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