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Plenary Program and CPDD 2010 Awardees Sunday, June 13, 2010 at 8:45 AM Fairmont Scottsdale Salons DEFG Scottsdale, Arizona

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Page 1: 057770 2010 CPDD Plenary Brochure-12pgs Layout 1 · history of cigarette smoking in the U.S., The Cigarette Century: The Rise, Fall, and Deadly Persistence of the Product that Defined

Plenary Program and

CPDD 2010 Awardees

Sunday, June 13, 2010 at 8:45 AM Fairmont Scottsdale

Salons DEFG Scottsdale, Arizona

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NATHAN B. EDDY MEMORIAL AWARD 1974 Maurice Seevers 1992 Joseph V. Brady 1975 Harris Isbell 1993 Lee N. Robins 1976 Abraham Wikler 1994 Jerome H. Jaffe 1977 William Martin 1995 Herbert D. Kleber 1978 Hans Kosterlitz 1996 Griffith Edwards 1979 E. Leong Way 1997 Martin W. Adler 1980 Avram Goldstein 1998 John W. Lewis 1981 Everette May 1999 Mary Jeanne Kreek 1982 Vincent Dole 2000 William L. Dewey

Marie Nyswander 2001 Kenner C. Rice 1983 Eric Simon 2002 Horace H. Loh 1984 Raymond Houde 2003 Charles P. O’Brien 1985 Louis Harris 2004 James H. Woods 1986 Harold Kalant 2005 Conan Kornetsky 1987 Clifton K. Himmelsbach 2006 F. Ivy Carroll 1988 Albert Herz 2007 Jack H. Mendelson 1989 Leo E. Hollister Nancy K. Mello 1990 Charles Schuster 2008 Billy R. Martin 1991 Phillip S. Portoghese 2009 Robert L. Balster Akira E. Takemori JOSEPH COCHIN YOUNG INVESTIGATOR AWARD 1987 Michael Bozarth 2000 Leslie Amass 1988 Frank Porreca Sharon Walsh 1989 Errol B. De Souza 2001 S. Barak Caine 1990 Thomas Kosten 2002 Laura Sim-Selley 1991 Richard Rothman 2003 Andrew Coop 1992 Jeffrey M. Witkin 2004 Sandra D. Comer 1993 Stephen Higgins 2005 Thomas E. Eissenberg 1994 Richard W. Foltin James K. Rowlett 1995 Warren K. Bickel 2006 Christopher Pierce 1996 Toni Shippenberg 2007 Nancy Petry 1997 Lisa H. Gold 2008 Hendree Jones 1998 S. Stevens Negus 2009 Laura Bohn 1999 Sari Izenwasser J. MICHAEL MORRISON AWARD MEDIA AWARD 1986 Edward C. Tocus 1990 Katie McCabe 1988 Marvin Snyder 1992 James Burke 1990 Arthur E. Jacobson 1998 Riester Robb 1992 Hans Halbach 2000 Sean Clarkin 1993 Beny Primm Carlos Davila Rinaldi 1995 Jack D. Blaine 2001 Michael Massing 1997 Rao Rapaka 2002 David T. Courtwright 1999 Roy W. Pickens 2003 Addiction Studies 2001 Roger Brown Program for Journalists 2003 Richard L. Hawks 2004 Peter Reuter 2004 Ronald Brady 2005 Brian Vastag 2006 Joseph Frascella 2006 Harvey Weiss 2008 Rita Liu 2007 John Hoffman, Susan Froemke,

Betty Tai Sheila Nevins 2008 William Cope Moyers 2009 Nancy D. Campbell

MENTORSHIP AWARD DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD 2000 Robert L. Balster 1994 Richard A. Millstein 2001 James H. Woods 2002 Alan I. Leshner 2002 Conan Kornetsky 2003 Francis Vocci, Jr. 2003 Charles R. Schuster Charles O’Keefe 2004 E. Leong Way 2005 Ian P. Stolerman 2005 Linda A. Dykstra 2006 Richard M. Eisenberg 2006 James C. Anthony Jonathan B. Kamien 2007 Scott E. Lukas 2007 Ellen B. Geller 2008 Joseph V. Brady 2008 Geoffrey K. Mumford 2009 George Bigelow 2009 William L. Dewey

Plenary Program

8:45 Welcoming RemarksLinda J. Porrino, CPDD President

8:55 Report from the National Institute on Drug AbuseNora D. Volkow, Director, NIDA

9:25 Drug Strategies and Potential for Research OpportunitiesA. Thomas McLellan, Deputy Director for Demand Reduction, ONDCP

9:55 Presentation of the Distinguished Service Award to Jack Henningfield

Introduction by Sharon L. Walsh

10:00 Presentation of the CPDD/NIDA Media Award to Allan Brandt

Introduction by Marc J. Kaufman

10:05 Presentation of the J. Michael Morrison Award to Cora Lee Wetherington

Introduction by Marilyn Caroll

10:10 Presentation of the Joseph Cochin Young InvestigatorAward to David JentschIntroduction by Edythe London

10:15 Presentation of the Mentorship Award to Charles O’BrienIntroduction by Anna Rose Childress

10:20 Presentation of the Nathan B. Eddy Award to Theodore Cicero

Introduction by Linda Cottler

10:30 Nathan B. Eddy Award Lecture by Theodore Cicero

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NATHAN B. EDDY MEMORIAL AWARD

Theodore J. Cicero Professor, Vice Chairman for Research

Department of Psychiatry Washington University, St. Louis, MO

Theodore J. Cicero serves as a Professor and Vice Chairman for Research, in the Department of Psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. He also served as Vice Chancellor for Research at Washington University from 1996 to 2006. Dr. Cicero received his Ph.D. in Neuropharmacology from Purdue University in 1969. He has been at Washington University since that time, becoming a tenured professor of Psychiatry and Neurobiology in 1978. In addition to his university positions, Dr. Cicero serves on the Editorial Board of many journals and is an expert advisor to the World Health Organization (WHO) Substance Abuse Advisory Group. He is also past chairperson of the Food and Drug Administration Drug Abuse Advisory panel (DAAC) from 1985 to 1993. Dr. Cicero is a life fellow of the American College of Neuropharmacology and past president of the College on Problems of Drug Dependence (1984-1985). Dr. Cicero has over 195 publications related to the neurobiological substrates of substance abuse and the characteristics of prescription opioid abuse, and has active grants from the National Institute of Drug Abuse.

DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD

Jack E. Henningfield, Ph.D. Professor, Adjunct, Behavioral Biology

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore, MD

Vice President, Research and Health Policy Pinney Associates, Bethesda, MD

Jack E. Henningfield, Ph.D., is Professor, Adjunct, Behavioral Biology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and Vice President, Research and Health Policy, Pinney Associates, and a Charter Fellow of CPDD. He has published nearly 400 articles, books and monographs on a broad range of drugs and contributed to many reports of the Surgeon General, Institute of Medicine, Royal College of UK, and World Health Organization. His most recent book is Art and Addiction. While serving as head of the NIDA Abuse Potential Assessment Section and the Clinical Pharmacology Laboratory until 1996, he worked to increase excellence in science through greater participation of Under-Represented Populations. He has testified before the US Congress numerous times on tobacco addiction, and treatment and regulatory issues. He contributed to the development of the International Tobacco Treaty, and the Tobacco Control Act authorizing FDA regulation of tobacco and he serves on scientific advisory committees to WHO and FDA. These regulatory frameworks put abuse liability of tobacco and nicotine products on par with importance of harmfulness, and patterns of initiation, dependence and cessation in the population as vital for surveillance. His passion is working in science at the service of public health policy.

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Allan M. Brandt, Ph.D. Dean, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences

Harvard University Boston, MA

Allan M. Brandt is the Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University. He is the Amalie Moses Kass Professor of the History of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and he holds a joint appointment in the Department of the History of Science at Harvard University where he served as chair from 2000-06. Brandt earned his undergraduate degree at Brandeis University and a Ph.D. in American History from Columbia University in 1983. His work focuses on social and ethical aspects of health, disease, medical practices, and policy in the twentieth century. Brandt is the author of No Magic Bullet: A Social History of Venereal Disease in the United States since 1880 (1987); and co-editor of Morality and Health (1997). He has written on the social history of epidemic disease; the history of public health and health policy; and the history of human subject research among other topics. His book on the social and cultural history of cigarette smoking in the U.S., The Cigarette Century: The Rise, Fall, and Deadly Persistence of the Product that Defined America, was published by Basic Books in 2007 (paperback, 2009). Brandt has been elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2004 he testified on behalf of the US Department of Justice in US v. Philip Morris, the civil racketeering case brought by the federal government against the tobacco industry.

CPDD/NIDA MEDIA AWARD

MENTORSHIP AWARD

Charles P. O’Brien, M.D., Ph.D. Kenneth Appel Professor

University of Pennsylvania/VA Medical Center Philadelphia, PA

Charles P. O'Brien, a native of New Orleans, earned M.D. and Ph.D. degrees from Tulane University. He received residency training at Harvard, Tulane, University of London, and University of Pennsylvania in internal medicine, neurology and psychiatry. As Chief of Psychiatry at the Philadelphia VA Medical Center, he was responsible for over 9,000 psychiatric patients. Despite this large clinical responsibility, he was able to establish and direct a clinical research program that has had a major impact on the treatment of addictive disorders. His research group has been responsible for numerous discoveries described in over 500 publications that have elucidated basic information on the nature of addiction and improved the results of treatment for addictive disorders. His work involves discovery of CNS changes involved in relapse, new medications, behavioral treatments and instruments for measuring the severity of addictive disorders. He was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences (1991) and has received numerous awards including an honorary doctorate from the University of Bordeaux, the Eddy Award for research from the College on Problems of Drug Dependence (2003), American Psychiatric Association Research Award (2000) and the Gold Medal Research Award from the Society of Biological Psychiatry (2010).

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J. MICHAEL MORRISON AWARD

Cora Lee Wetherington, Ph.D. Woman and Sex/Gender Differences Research Coordinator

National Institute on Drug Abuse Bethesda, MD

Dr. Wetherington joined the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) in 1987. Since 1995, she has served as NIDA’s Women and Sex/Gender Differences Research Coordinator. In that role, her activities are aimed at integrating and advancing research on issues specific to women and on sex/gender differences into all areas of drug abuse research. She also serves as a program officer in NIDA’s Behavioral Sciences Research Branch within the Division of Basic Neuroscience and Behavioral Research where she manages and promotes a program of extramural preclinical research that includes the study of sex differences, vulnerability to drug abuse, and the behavioral and neurobiological effects of exposure to drugs during lifespan development. She received her Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Prior to joining NIDA in 1987, she was a professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, where for twelve years she taught courses and conducted research in the field of animal learning and behavior. Her research was funded in part by grants from NIH and the National Science Foundation. In 2005 she was awarded the Meritorious Research Service Commendation by the American Psychological Association Board of Scientific Affairs for her leadership in promoting research on women, sex/gender differences and drug abuse.

JOSEPH COCHIN YOUNG INVESTIGATOR AWARD

J. David Jentsch, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry and

Bio-behavioral Sciences University of California

Los Angeles, CA J. David Jentsch received his Bachelor’s degree in behavioral biology from The Johns Hopkins University (1992) and his PhD in neurobiology from Yale University (1999). His graduate work, conducted under the supervision of Professor Robert Roth, focused on characterizing the biochemical changes in prefrontal cortical regions associated with prolonged experience with psychotomimetic and stimulant drugs of abuse. After conducting post-doctoral training periods at the University of Pittsburgh and Yale University, Dr. Jentsch was appointed as an Assistant Professor at UCLA in 2001, where he is now a Professor in the Departments of Psychology and Psychiatry; he is also Associate Director for Research of the Brain Research Institute. His research focuses on genetic and neurochemical mechanisms that influence cognition, impulse control and decision-making in laboratory animals. In reaction to escalating extremism amongst animal rights activists, which culminated in the firebombing of his car in 2009, Dr. Jentsch formed the group Pro-test for Science. He and his colleagues play a prominent role in scientific advocacy by coordinating the response of the scientific community to attacks against researchers. In line with these efforts, Dr. Jentsch is a member of Board of Directors of the biomedical research advocacy group, Americans for Medical Progress.

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