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Michael Bardo, PhD
Professor and Director
Center for Drug Abuse Research Translation (CDART)
Department of Psychology
BBSRB, Room 253
University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY 40536-0509
Office Phone: 859.257.6456
E-mail: mbardo@uky.edu
I received my Ph.D. in Experimental
Psychology in 1980 at Iowa State University under the supervision of Dr.
Richard Hughes. My dissertation investigated the development of tolerance
to morphine in infant rats. From 1980-82, I worked as a postdoctoral scholar
in the Department of Pharmacology at the University of Iowa under the
supervision of Dr. Gerald Gebhart. Since 1982, I have been in the Department
of Psychology at the University of Kentucky. I presently serve as Director
of the NIDA-funded Center for Drug Abuse Research Translation (CDART).
Our laboratory is primarily
interested in understanding the basic neuropharmacological mechanisms
that underlie drug abuse vulnerability using laboratory animals. A major
focus of our work is aimed at determining the impact of environmental
factors during development on the behavioral effects of drugs of abuse.
Neural correlates of the behavioral changes are being examined, with specific
emphasis on the mesolimbic dopamine reward system. Our laboratory is also
involved in collaborative research to develop novel medications for the
treatment of stimulant abuse.
Students trained my laboratory
are exposed to a variety of behavioral, pharmacological and neuroscience
techniques. Behavioral training is obtained in both operant and classical
conditioning models. Students can also receive training in various neuropharmacological
techniques, including small animal surgery, brain microinjections, and
HPLC analysis of neurochemicals. Further specialized training in neuropharmacology,
neurochemistry and/or human behavioral pharmacology is readily available
through my active faculty collaborators in the Medical Center on campus.
For
more information on my research and teaching, click here.
Selected Publications:
Cain, M. E., Saucier, D. A.,
and Bardo, M. T. (2005). Novelty seeking and drug use: Contribution of
an animal model. Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology,
13, 367-375.
Champtiaux, N., Kalivas, P.
W., and Bardo, M. T. (2006). Contribution of dihydro-beta-erythroidine
sensitive nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in the ventral tegmental area
to cocaine-induced behavioral sensitization in rats. Behavioral Brain
Research, 168, 120-126.
Neugebauer,
N. M., Zhang, Z., Crooks, P. A., Dwoskin, L. P. and Bardo, M. T. (2006).
Effect of a novel nicotinic receptor antagonist, N,N'-dodecane-1, 12-diyl-bis-3-picolinium
dibromide (bPiDDB), on nicotine self-administration and hyperactivity
in rats. Psychopharmacology, 184, 426-434.
Last updated: April
06, 2006
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