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A Review of Preclinical Research Demonstrating that Drug and Non-Drug ReinforcersDifferentially Affect Behavior
Author(s) -
David N. Kearns,
María Gómez-Serrano,
Brendan J. Tunstall
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
current drug abuse reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1874-4745
pISSN - 1874-4737
DOI - 10.2174/1874473711104040261
Subject(s) - affect (linguistics) , drug , psychology , preclinical research , medicine , pharmacology , neuroscience , communication
This review describes and summarizes current preclinical research revealing important differences between drug and non-drug reinforcers in terms of their effects on behavior. Despite research showing that drugs are not especially strong reinforcers in animals, a number of other behavioral differences potentially relevant to addiction have been reported in studies that have compared drug and non-drug reinforcers. Several of these effects appear only after long-term access to drugs. These include an escalation of drug intake, an increased persistence in responding for the drug, and a decreased sensitivity to the effects of punishers or other suppressors of drug seeking. Further differences between drug and non-drug reinforcers include the effects that reinforcer-paired stimuli have on behavior. Drug cues, as compared to food cues, have been shown to exert greater control over reinforcer-seeking behavior after periods of abstinence. Similarly, behavior previously reinforced by drugs, but not food, has been shown to be susceptible to stress-induced reinstatement after extinction. The behavioral differences between drug and non-drug reinforcers reviewed here may identify special features of drugs that lead to addiction.

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