James W. Fenwick
University of Vermont
18 Papers
306 Citations
James W. Fenwick is an academic researcher from University of Vermont. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nicotine gum & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 18 publications.
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Papers
Smoking cessation among self-quitters.
John R. Hughes,Suzy B. Gulliver,James W. Fenwick,William A. Valliere,Kevin Cruser,Sara L. Pepper,Pam Shea,Laura J. Solomon,Brian S. Flynn +8 more
TL;DR: The results challenge beliefs that most smokers can initially stop smoking and that most relapse occurs later on postcessation.
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Caffeine Self-administration, Withdrawal, and Adverse Effects Among Coffee Drinkers
John R. Hughes,Stephen T. Higgins,Warren K. Bickel,William K. Hunt,James W. Fenwick,Suzy B. Gulliver,Gina C. Mireault +6 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that some coffee drinkers exhibit signs of a caffeine dependence, ie, they self-administer coffee for the effects of caffeine, have withdrawal symptoms on cessation, and experience adverse effects.
136
•Journal Article
Caffeine drug discrimination in humans: acquisition, specificity and correlation with self-reports.
TL;DR: The results suggest that a caffeine (320 mg/70 kg)-placebo discrimination can be acquired and maintained, is related to self-reported drug effects if the training conditions are correctly identified and has some pharmacological specificity.
99
Effect of cost on the self-administration and efficacy of nicotine gum: a preliminary study.
TL;DR: Cost-benefit estimates suggest that an insurance plan, HMO, etc., would recoup any costs in subsidizing nicotine gum and perhaps incur a net financial gain.
98
Effects of intranasal cocaine on human learning, performance and physiology.
Stephen T. Higgins,Warren K. Bickel,John R. Hughes,Mary Lynn,Mark A. Capeless,James W. Fenwick +5 more
TL;DR: This is the first experimental demonstration that acutely administered cocaine can improve behavioral performance in rested subjects and the duration of cardiac effects in this study was longer than previously reported with intranasal cocaine, perhaps due to the concurrent behavioral testing.
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