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VARIABLE‐RATIO SCHEDULES OF TIMEOUT FROM AVOIDANCE: EFFECTS OF d ‐AMPHETAMINE AND MORPHINE
Author(s) -
Galizio Mark,
Allen Angela R.
Publication year - 1991
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.1991.56-193
Subject(s) - timeout , reinforcement , psychology , amphetamine , morphine , anesthesia , dextroamphetamine , computer science , medicine , social psychology , neuroscience , computer network , dopamine
Rats were trained on concurrent schedules in which pressing one lever postponed shock and pressing the other lever produced periods of signaled timeout from avoidance on variable‐ratio schedules. These procedures generated high rates of timeout‐reinforced responding and provided a baseline for studying the effects of drugs on behavior maintained by different types of negative reinforcement (shock postponement vs. timeout). Morphine (2.5 to 10.0 mg/kg) reduced behavior maintained by timeout at doses that increased or had no effect on avoidance responding. In contrast, d ‐amphetamine (0.125 to 2.0 mg/kg) produced large increases in timeout responding at doses that had minimal effect on avoidance in rats trained on variable‐interval and variable‐ratio schedules. Thus, the event‐dependent effects of morphine, observed in previous studies in which timeout responding was maintained at low rates by interval schedules, were replicated with high timeout rates maintained by variable‐ratio schedules. The effects of d ‐amphetamine could also be described as “event dependent” because timeout responding was stimulated more than avoidance regardless of the maintenance schedule or baseline rate.

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