[USA] [Chicago] Healthy men and women aged 18-35 who have used ‘dance’ drugs

isoular

Bluelighter
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Aug 8, 2008
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Healthy men and women aged 18-35 who have used ‘dance’ drugs needed to participate in a paid research study investigating individual differences in responses to drugs. This study is conducted by Drs. Harriet de Wit, Gillinder Bedi and Royce Lee in the Dept. of Psychiatry at the University of Chicago. It pays $375 for 7 sessions. Please email [email protected] or call 773.702.3560
 
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i would doubt it, but you can always give him a call
 
We have found a published study by this research group on a similar topic and the article mentions online recruitment was used. Here's the study:

Effects of MDMA on sociability and neural response to social threat and social reward
Rationale ±3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, “ecstasy”) reportedly produces unique subjective effects, including increased sociability, feelings of closeness with others, and reduced interpersonal defensiveness. Despite their apparent importance in recreational and potential psychotherapeutic use of MDMA, the defining characteristics and neurobiological mechanisms of these interpersonal effects are poorly understood.
Materials and methods We investigated acute effects of MDMA on self-reported sociability and neuronal activation in response to socially threatening (angry and fearful faces) and socially rewarding (happy faces) stimuli. Assessment of social threat response focused on amygdala activation, whereas assessment of social reward focused on ventral striatum activation. Healthy volunteers (N = 9) reporting past ecstasy use completed three experimental sessions, receiving MDMA (0.75 and 1.5 mg/kg) and placebo (PBO) under double-blind conditions. During peak drug effects, participants underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging while viewing standardized images depicting emotional facial expressions including angry, fearful, happy, and neutral expressions. They also completed standardized self-report measures of sociability.
Results MDMA (1.5 mg/kg) increased self-reported sociability compared to MDMA (0.75 mg/kg) and PBO. MDMA (1.5 mg/kg) attenuated left amygdala response to angry facial expressions compared to PBO, but MDMA did not affect amygdala reactivity to fearful expressions. MDMA (0.75 mg/kg) enhanced ventral striatum response to happy expressions relative to PBO.
Conclusions These data present the first evidence that MDMA may increase sociability in humans both by diminishing responses to threatening stimuli and enhancing responses to rewarding social signals.

Link to source: http://www.springerlink.com/content/l661283j87406l42

PM me if you want to read the full text article.
 
^^^I can check with the research group in question to determine whether that study used people recruited off BL.
 
^^^I can check with the research group in question to determine whether that study used people recruited off BL.

Hello! Sure, if you like :)

Eventually we hope to create a better system to encourage researchers to return to the threads themselves... but that's a while off at the moment.
 
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