Suppr超能文献

Reinforcing and aversive effects of caffeine measured by flavor preference conditioning in caffeine-naive and caffeine-acclimated rats.

作者信息

Myers Kevin P, Izbicki Emily V

机构信息

Department of Psychology, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA 17837, USA.

出版信息

Physiol Behav. 2006 Jul 30;88(4-5):585-96. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2006.05.010. Epub 2006 Jun 27.

Abstract

Literature on the stimulus properties of caffeine in rats and humans has described both reinforcing and aversive effects. But some disagreement exists regarding whether caffeine is an effective positive reinforcer for caffeine-naive individuals, and how its stimulus properties change with habitual consumption. These experiments measured the reinforcing/aversive effects of caffeine for rats across a range of concentrations, assayed by conditioned aversion or preference for caffeine-paired flavors, and investigated changes in preference/aversion after extensive prior consumption. In the first two experiments, caffeine-naive rats were trained in sessions alternating daily between a distinctly flavored palatable solution (CS+) containing caffeine (0.07-0.25 mg/ml, yielding actual doses of approximately 4-31 mg/kg bodyweight) and a differently flavored palatable solution (CS-) without caffeine. In post-conditioning two-bottle choice tests between the CS+ and CS- flavors a clear preference/aversion function was apparent across the range of doses. In a third experiment, extensive acclimation to daily caffeine consumption prior to flavor-caffeine pairing significantly altered the preference/aversion function, apparently by reducing the aversiveness of higher doses, not increasing reinforcement by a low dose. These experiments provide additional evidence for an inherent reinforcing effect for naive rats, and also an effect of prior caffeine consumption history.

摘要

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验