Bookedited by Hamed Ekhtiari and Martin Paulus.
Contents:
Preface: Neuroscience for addiction medicine: from prevention to rehabilitation
Part I: Neuroscience methods for addiction medicine. Animal models for addiction medicine: from vulnerable phenotypes to addicted individuals
Animal models of drug relapse and craving: from drug priming-induced reinstatement to incubation of craving after voluntary abstinence
Computational modeling for addiction medicine: from cognitive models to clinical applications
Electrophysiology for addiction medicine: from methodology to conceptualization of reward deficits
Neurocognitive rehabilitation for addiction medicine: from neurophysiological markers to cognitive rehabilitation and relapse prevention
Structural imaging for addiction medicine: from neurostructure to neuroplasticity
Functional neuroimaging for addiction medicine: from mechanisms to practical considerations
Resting state functional connectivity analysis for addiction medicine: from individual loci to complex networks
PET imaging for addiction medicine: from neural mechanisms to clinical considerations
Genetic imaging consortium for addiction medicine: from neuroimaging to genes
Part II: Neuroscience for interventions in addiction medicine. Human pharmacology for addiction medicine: from evidence to clinical recommendations
Emerging targets for addiction neuropharmacology: from mechanisms to therapeutics
Cognitive interventions for addiction medicine: understanding the underlying neurobiological mechanisms
Adolescent psychotherapy for addiction medicine: from brain development to neurocognitive treatment mechanisms
Cognitive neuroscience of cognitive retraining for addiction medicine: from mediating mechanisms to questions of efficacy
Perspectives on neurocognitive rehabilitation as an adjunct treatment for addictive disorders: from cognitive improvement to relapse prevention
Noninvasive brain stimulation for addiction medicine: from monitoring to modulation
What the alcohol doctor ordered from the neuroscientist: theragnostic biomarkers for personalized treatments
What does addiction medicine expect from neuroscience? From genes and neurons to treatment responses.