Pages that link to "Q42940968"
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The following pages link to Pharmacological neuroenhancement and brain doping : Chances and risks (Q42940968):
Displaying 18 items.
- Evaluating the drivers of and obstacles to the willingness to use cognitive enhancement drugs: the influence of drug characteristics, social environment, and personal characteristics (Q21203313) (← links)
- What Users Think about the Differences between Caffeine and Illicit/Prescription Stimulants for Cognitive Enhancement (Q30465974) (← links)
- Use of illicit and prescription drugs for cognitive or mood enhancement among surgeons (Q34660460) (← links)
- To dope or not to dope: neuroenhancement with prescription drugs and drugs of abuse among Swiss university students (Q35043495) (← links)
- Associations between physical and cognitive doping--a cross-sectional study in 2.997 triathletes (Q35043553) (← links)
- Attitudes towards prescribing cognitive enhancers among primary care physicians in Germany (Q35084473) (← links)
- The Use of Prescription Drugs, Recreational Drugs, and "Soft Enhancers" for Cognitive Enhancement among Swiss Secondary School Students (Q35822721) (← links)
- Using Caffeine Pills for Performance Enhancement. An Experimental Study on University Students' Willingness and Their Intention to Try Neuroenhancements (Q36586358) (← links)
- The use of Ginkgo biloba in healthy elderly (Q37471077) (← links)
- Substances used and prevalence rates of pharmacological cognitive enhancement among healthy subjects (Q38248567) (← links)
- Low intensity transcranial electric stimulation: Safety, ethical, legal regulatory and application guidelines (Q38657380) (← links)
- Brain doping: stimulants use and misuse among a sample of Italian college students (Q41611603) (← links)
- Doping for the brain (Q48171249) (← links)
- Randomized response estimates for the 12-month prevalence of cognitive-enhancing drug use in university students (Q48201339) (← links)
- No evidence for effects of a high-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation series on verbal and figural fluency and TAP task performance in healthy male volunteers (Q50766322) (← links)
- Acute effects of lisdexamfetamine and D-amphetamine on social cognition and cognitive performance in a placebo-controlled study in healthy subjects. (Q53440116) (← links)
- Prevalence Estimates for Pharmacological Neuroenhancement in Austrian University Students: Its Relation to Health-Related Risk Attitude and the Framing Effect of Caffeine Tablets. (Q55405889) (← links)
- Attitudes Toward Cognitive Enhancement in Users and Nonusers of Stimulants for Cognitive Enhancement: A Pilot Study (Q58128828) (← links)