Buzz, Sensation Seeking Dr. Ken Carter Buzz, Sensation Seeking Dr. Ken Carter

Extreme Sports comes to Denver!

I was honored to be a consultant on the Beyond Human Limits exhibit and I was excited to hear that it is on it’s way to Denver Colorado. It opens September 13, 2019. If you are in the Denver area, be sure to check it out.

For more information on the Denver Museum of Science and Nature take a look here.

https://www.dmns.org/visit/exhibitions/extreme-sports/

For more information on Beyond Human Limits watch this video!

Read More
Buzz, Sensation Seeking NaEem Gibson Buzz, Sensation Seeking NaEem Gibson

Sensation Seeking and and Oxycodone

by Na’eem Gibson

            High sensation seekers tend to seek a wide array of sensations to satisfy their urges and impulses.  Ranging from relatively low risk activities such as skydiving or recreational drug use, to dangerous activities like reckless driving and drug abuse, high sensation seekers tend to find themselves apart of experiences involving such as those previously mentioned.  In a study conducted by James P. Zacny, he came to find that like many other drugs, oxycodone had varying effects on male and female high sensation seekers and low sensation seekers.  As expected the high sensation seekers generally responded with overwhelmingly positive reactions to the opiate while the low sensation seekers responded with a mix of euphoric and dysphoric effects.

            While it is expected for a high sensation seeker to find the novel effects of oxycodone pleasurable and it is expected for low sensation seekers to find the effects disturbing, the addition of both female and male sensation seekers varied the results quite a bit.  In the study Zacny found that male high sensation seekers did not report the dysphoric effects that the male and female low sensation seekers reported such as nausea or general confusion.  Zacny’s experiment was not the first of its kind as many others have compared potential differences in drug abuse between low sensation and high sensation seeks, but it is the first to do the comparison study between the two types of sensation seekers concerning their reactions to opioids.  

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0091305709003566?via=ihub

Read More