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COMPARISON OF DRUG EFFECTS ON FIXED‐RATIO PERFORMANCE AND CHAIN PERFORMANCE MAINTAINED UNDER A SECOND‐ORDER FIXED‐RATIO SCHEDULE
Author(s) -
Winsauer Peter J.,
Thompson Donald M.,
Moerschbaecher Joseph M.
Publication year - 1985
Publication title -
journal of the experimental analysis of behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.75
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1938-3711
pISSN - 0022-5002
DOI - 10.1901/jeab.1985.44-367
Subject(s) - phencyclidine , pentobarbital , dextroamphetamine , timeout , amphetamine , food delivery , schedule , pharmacology , toxicology , psychology , medicine , mathematics , statistics , computer science , biology , neuroscience , business , nmda receptor , receptor , marketing , dopamine , operating system
In one component of a multiple schedule, pigeons were required to complete the same four‐response chain each session by responding sequentially on three identically lighted keys in the presence of four successively presented colors (chain performance). Food presentation occurred after five completions of the chain (i.e., after 20 correct responses). Errors, such as responding on the center or right key when the left was designated correct, produced a brief timeout but did not reset the chain. In the other component, responding on a single key (lighted white) was maintained by food presentation under a fixed‐ratio 20 schedule. In general, phencyclidine and d ‐amphetamine produced dose‐dependent decreases in the overall response rates in both components. With pentobarbital, overall rate in each component generally increased at intermediate doses and decreased at higher doses. All three drugs produced dose‐dependent disruptive effects on chain‐performance accuracy. Phencyclidine and pentobarbital increased percent errors at doses that had little or no rate‐decreasing effects, whereas d ‐amphetamine generally increased percent errors only at doses that substantially decreased overall rate. At high doses, all three drugs produced greater disruption of chain performance than of fixedratio performance, as indicated by a slower return to control responding, although the effects of d ‐amphetamine were less selective than those of phencyclidine or pentobarbital.

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