<p>1. Animal Models for Addiction Medicine: From Vulnerable Phenotypes to Addicted Individuals <br>2. Animal Models of Drug Relapse and Craving: From Drug Priming-Induced Reinstatement to Incubation of Craving after Voluntary Abstinence<br>3. Computational Modeling for Addiction Medicine: From Cognitive Models to Clinical Application<br>4. Electrophysiology for Addiction Medicine: From Methodology to Conceptualization of Reward Deficit<br>5. Neurocognitive Rehabilitation for Addiction Medicine: From Neurophysiological Markers to Cognitive Rehabilitation and Relapse Prevention<br>6. Structural Imaging for Addiction Medicine: From Neurostructure to Neuroplasticity<br>7. Functional Neuroimaging for Addiction Medicine: From Mechanism to Practical Considerations<br>8. Resting State Functional Connectivity Analysis for Addiction Medicine: From Individual Loci to Complex Networks<br>9. PET Imaging for Addiction Medicine: From Neural Mechanisms to Clinical Considerations<br>10. Genetic Imaging Consortium for Addiction Medicine; from Neuroimaging to Genes<br>11. Human Pharmacology for Addiction Medicine: From Evidence to Clinical Recommendations<br>12. Emerging Targets for Addiction Neuropharmacology: From Mechanisms to Therapeutics<br>13. Cognitive Interventions for Addiction Medicine: Understanding the Underlying Neurobiological Mechanisms<br>14. Adolescent Psychotherapy for Addiction Medicine: From Brain Development to Neurocognitive Treatment Mechanisms<br>15. Cognitive Neuroscience of Cognitive Retraining for Addiction Medicine: From Mediating Mechanisms to Questions of Efficacy<br>16. Perspectives on Neurocognitive Rehabilitation as an Adjunct Treatment for Addictive Disorders: From Cognitive Improvement to Relapse Prevention<br>17. Noninvasive Brain Stimulation for Addiction Medicine: From Monitoring to Modulation<br>18. What the Alcohol Doctor Ordered from the Neuroscientist: Theragnostic Biomarkers for Personalized Treatments<br>19. What Does Addiction Medicine Expect from Neuroscience? From Genes and Neurons to<br>Treatment Responses</p>