2018
DOI: 10.1177/0269881117748901
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Rewarding effects of physical activity predict sensitivity to the acute subjective effects of d-amphetamine in healthy volunteers

Abstract: While individual differences in reward sensitivity are believed to generalize across drugs and alternative rewards, this notion has received little empirical attention in human research. Here, we tested whether individual differences in the subjective rewarding effects of physical activity were associated with the subjective response to d-amphetamine administration. Healthy volunteers ( n=95; age 18-35 years) completed questionnaires measuring the self-reported pleasurable effects of physical activity and othe… Show more

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References 63 publications
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