← Leaderboards
Maggie M Sweitzer
Duke University
$4,216,001
Attributed
$4,848,472
Total exposure
5
Grants
5
Lead (contact PI)
Attributed= this PI's even-split share of every grant they're on (the fair, additive number). Exposure = full size of all those grants.
Funding over time
peak $1.6M · FY2016–25$2M$1.5M$1M$500K$0
'16
'17
'18
'19
'20
'21
'22
'23
'24
'25
Funding mix
By agency
NIH$4,848,472 · 5
By mechanism
R01$3,105,911 · 2
K23$816,811 · 1
R34$483,000 · 1
R21$442,750 · 1
Top collaborators
- Paolo Mannelli2 shared
- Katherine Theresa Martucci1 shared
Most similar at Duke University
Same institution · by research overlap
- Francis Joseph McClernon$15,864,633
- Jason Anthony Oliver$3,706,984
- Scott H Kollins$13,082,961
- Andrea Hobkirk$3,872,395
- John T Mitchell$683,257
Others in their field
Top investigators on “Behavioral”
- Sonia M Thomas · Research Triangle Institute$700,865,642
- Tracy L Nolen · Research Triangle Institute$474,487,152
- Lawrence Corey · Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center$316,652,479
- Chanza Baytop · Westat, Inc.$271,217,917
- Everette D Joseph · Howard University$243,972,016
- Eric J Barron · Pennsylvania State Univ University Park$243,972,016
Research focus
BehavioralSmokingNicotineDependenceCigaretteDesignPsychological ReinforcementSmokerSeveritiesPathway InteractionsLiteratureWithdrawalResponseSmoking CessationCigarette SmokeNicotine DependenceParticipantBrainAbstinenceFunctional Magnetic Resonance ImagingSmokeCorpus Striatum StructureLaboratory StudyNeuroimaging
Grant awards (14)
Neural correlates and behavioral impact of withdrawal-induced hyperalgesia among people who smoke with and without chronic pain$781,942
R01 · FY2025 · DA · contact PI
Neurobehavioral mechanisms linking childhood adversity to increased risk for smoking$598,775
R01 · FY2025 · DA · contact PI
Targeting Reinforcement Mechanisms for Smoking Cessation Using Very Low Nicotine Content Cigarettes in Individuals with Opioid Use Disorder and Chronic Pain$241,500
R34 · FY2025 · DA · contact PI
Neurobehavioral mechanisms linking childhood adversity to increased risk for smoking$564,742
R01 · FY2024 · DA · contact PI
Targeting Reinforcement Mechanisms for Smoking Cessation Using Very Low Nicotine Content Cigarettes in Individuals with Opioid Use Disorder and Chronic Pain$241,500
R34 · FY2024 · DA · contact PI
Neurobehavioral mechanisms linking childhood adversity to increased risk for smoking$564,742
R01 · FY2023 · DA · contact PI
Neurobehavioral mechanisms linking childhood adversity to increased risk for smoking$595,710
R01 · FY2022 · DA · contact PI
Using Very Low Nicotine Content Cigarettes as a Strategy to Disrupt the Pain-Smoking Reinforcement Cycle$201,250
R21 · FY2022 · DA · contact PI
Using Very Low Nicotine Content Cigarettes as a Strategy to Disrupt the Pain-Smoking Reinforcement Cycle$241,500
R21 · FY2021 · DA · contact PI
Targeting reward dysfunction as a mechanism to improve smoking cessation$168,429
K23 · FY2020 · DA · contact PI
Targeting reward dysfunction as a mechanism to improve smoking cessation$168,429
K23 · FY2019 · DA · contact PI
Targeting reward dysfunction as a mechanism to improve smoking cessation$168,429
K23 · FY2018 · DA · contact PI
Targeting reward dysfunction as a mechanism to improve smoking cessation$156,862
K23 · FY2017 · DA · contact PI
Targeting reward dysfunction as a mechanism to improve smoking cessation$154,662
K23 · FY2016 · DA · contact PI