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| UMD Research on Gambling, Psychology, Addiction, Treatment, and Public Policy |
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Stephen R. McDaniel received his Ph.D. from The Florida State University, in1995. His research interests focus on: 1) how individual differences, such as personality traits, influence consumption and response to certain entertainment stimuli, including gambling; and 2) marketing and public policy related to gambling, alcohol and tobacco use. He has published on risk-taking and gambling and presented his work at the 8th Annual NCRG Conference on Gambling and Addiction. He was principle investigator on the marketing portion of a state-sponsored study on the Maryland horse racing industry in the late '90s.
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Dr. Stephen McDaniel
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Carl W. Lejuez received his Ph.D. in 2000 from West Virginia University. After serving as faculty in the Brown University School of Medicine and as the Director of Laboratory Research in the Addictions Research Group at Butler Hospital, he joined the Clinical Psychology Program at the University of Maryland in 2001. His clinical and research interests focus on the development of ecologically valid laboratory analogues of addiction and their use to better understand the active ingredients of treatment. He has been awarded grants to study pharmacological interventions in gambling addiction, while publishing several articles in this area and serving on the editorial board of "Journal of Gambling Studies."
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Dr. Carl Lejuez
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Stacey Daughters received her Ph.D. in clinical psychology from the University of Maryland in 2005 following completion of her clinical internship at the Brown University School of Medicine. She is the Director of the Addictions Division of the Basic Processes in Addictive Behaviors Laboratory at UMD. Dr. Daughters applies a translational research approach that integrates basic research and clinical practice in understanding addictive disorders. She has published several articles in this area, including studies on gambling addiction and its treatment.
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Dr. Stacey Daughters
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Judith A. Shinogle received her doctorate in health economics from The Johns Hopkins University and was a National Institute of Mental Health Pre-Doctoral Fellow in Mental Health Economics. She received the 2004 NCHS/Academy Health Policy Fellowship to examine how state polices affect the generosity of health and mental health insurance coverage using the National Health Employer Health Insurance Survey. |
Dr. Judith Shinogle
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