Dr. Carl Hart is an Associate Professor in both the Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology at Columbia University
and is also a Research Scientist in the Division of Substance Abuse at the New York State Psychiatric Institute.
A major focus of Dr. Hart�s research is to understand the complex interactions between neurobiological and environmental
factors that mediate and modulate the actions of drugs of abuse, including drug-taking behavior and cognitive performance.
Dr. Hart�s research has been supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse for the past several years. In addition
to his substantial research responsibilities, Dr. Hart teaches an undergraduate Drugs and Behavior course and was
recently awarded Columbia University's highest teaching award.
Charles Ksir received his bachelor's degree in Psychology from the University of Texas at Austin, and his Ph.D.
from Indiana University in Bloomington. Following his postdoctoral training in Neurobiology at the Worcester Foundation
in Massachusetts, he began a 34-year career in teaching and research at the University of Wyoming, where he also
served in a variety of administrative positions. Now a professor emeritus, he focuses his efforts on teaching and
textbook writing. He has taught the psychology course Drugs and Behavior to over three thousand students since
1972, and has received several teaching awards.
After graduating from Cornell University and serving a brief stint in the U.S. Army, Oakley Ray became a full-time
student at the University of Pittsburgh, training to be a clinical psychologist. He completed his clinical training
and moved to animal research even before he received his Ph.D. Working in the behavioral research laboratory of
Larry Stein, he learned all the techniques and technologies of brain stimulation and biochemistry relevant to the
expanding field of neuropsychopharmacology. Stein�s laboratory was part of a multidisciplinary research facility
so Oakley Ray learned brain anatomy, surgery, biochemistry, and pharmacology. When Larry Stein moved on, Oakley
Ray took over the lab, expanded it, and established it as an independent research laboratory. He continued working
in Pittsburgh as an Associate Professor at the University of Pittsburgh and at Chatham College while still directing
the research laboratory in the Veterans Administration Hospital at Leech Farm Road in Pittsburgh.
Following his move to Nashville to be Professor in Psychology and Pharmacology, and later in Psychiatry, as well
as the Chief of the Psychology Program at the Nashville Veteran�s Administration Hospital, he became more involved
in human psychopharmacology. He later served as the Executive Secretary of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology
and the International College of Neuropsychopharmacology.
Summary
Drugs, Society and Human Behavior provides the latest information on drug use and its effects on society as well as on the individual. Trusted for more than 30 years by both instructors and students, this authoritative resource examines drugs and drug use from a variety of perspectives-behavioral, pharmacological, historical, social, legal, and clinical. The text not only gives students the tools and information to make better personal decisions about psychoactive substances but also promotes a deeper understanding of the individual problems and social conflicts that arise when others misuse and abuse these substances. Accompanying the text are instructor and student resources on the Online Learning Center.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Section One: Drug Use in Modern Society
1: Drug Use: An Overview
2: Drug Use as a Social Problem
3: Drug Products and Their Regulation
Section Two: How Drugs Work
4: The Nervous System
5: The Actions of Drugs
Section Three: Uppers and Downers
6: Stimulants
7: Depressants and Inhalants
8: Medication for Mental Disorders
Section Four: Alcohol
9: Alcohol
Section Five: Familiar Drugs
10: Tobacco
11: Caffeine
12: Dietary Supplements and Over-the-Counter Drugs
Section Six: Restricted Drugs
13: Opioids
14: Hallucinogens
15: Marijuana
16: Performance-Enhancing Drugs
Section Seven: Prevention and Treatment
17: Preventing Substance Abuse
18: Treating Substance Abuse and Dependence
Appendix A Drug Names
Appendix B Resources for Information and Assistance
Glossary