Skip to content
Faculty of Medicine
University of Toronto
U of T Links:
U of T Home
A to Z
Maps
Contact
Emergency
Quick Links
Home
Search
Contact Us
Education
Undergraduate Medical Education Program (MD Program)
MD-PhD Program
Postgraduate Medical Education (Post-MD Training)
Graduate Education (Masters and PhD Programs)
Continuing Education and Professional Development
Integrated Medical Education
Undergraduate Health Science (Bachelor of Science) Programs
Education Centres & Support
Student Support
Research
Office of the Vice-Dean, Research
Research Strategic Plan
University & Faculty Centres
Research Policies and Guidelines
Ethics Policies and Guidelines
Research Services and Links
Discovery Commons
MedStore
U of T Research
TAHSN Research Ethics Committee
Hospital Partners
Fully-Affiliated Hospitals/Research Institutes
Academies
Community-Affiliated Hospitals and Sites
Hospital Organizations
Faculty & Staff
Clinical Affairs
Professional Organizations
Appointment and Promotion Policies
Research Policies
University Policies & Collective Agreements
University Employee Services
Faculty of Medicine Teaching Awards
Alumni & Giving
UToronto Medicine Magazine
Giving
Alumni
Donor Report
Academic Units
Departments and Institutes
University & Faculty Centres
Leadership
Office of the Dean
Vice-Provost, Relations with Health Care Institutions
Governance and Leadership
Equity and Professionalism
Administrative Units and Offices
Communications
Contact Us
Office of the Dean
Vice-Provost, Relations with Health Care Institutions
Governance and Leadership
Equity and Professionalism
Administrative Units and Offices
Communications
Contact Us
>
Home
>
Leadership
>
Communications
>
Faculty of Medicine News
> Researchers identify neurobiological mechanism underlying nicotine withdrawal symptoms
Researchers identify neurobiological mechanism underlying nicotine withdrawal symptoms
The craving for nicotine experienced by smokers trying to kick their habit—and which pushes many to relapse—is in part the result of specific patterns of dopamine neuronal activity, according to new research from the University of Toronto, done in collaboration with The Scripps Research Institute and the University of Western Ontario.
Read more here
.