Maldonado Antoniette M, Finkbeiner Lauren M, Kirstein Cheryl L
Department of Psychology, Cognitive and Neurosciences, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL 33620, USA.
Alcohol. 2008 Dec;42(8):641-8. doi: 10.1016/j.alcohol.2008.08.003. Epub 2008 Oct 14.
Alcohol readily facilitates social interactions and this effect plays an important role in adolescent drinking behaviors. The ability of social interaction to alter behaviors in response to alcohol in adolescent animals has been assessed using the demonstrator-observer paradigm. The demonstrator is exposed to ethanol and the observer is tested for changes in behaviors in response to ethanol after social interaction between the dyad. The present experiment expanded on previous work to investigate the effects of different types of social interaction on subsequent voluntary ethanol consumption in adolescent male and female rats. Specifically, voluntary ethanol intake was assessed in adolescent observers after social interaction with an alcohol-free or -intoxicated same-sex familiar cage-mate or an age-matched unfamiliar conspecific. Demonstrators were intragastrically administered water or 1.5 g/kg ethanol and allowed to socially interact with observers for 30 min after a 1-h social isolation period. Subsequently, observers were allowed voluntary access to ethanol using a two-bottle choice paradigm overnight for 13 h. Male and female observers that interacted with an alcohol-intoxicated familiar cagemate consumed significantly more ethanol relative to their alcohol-free counterparts. However, adolescent male observers that socially interacted with an alcohol-intoxicated, age-matched unfamiliar conspecific consumed significantly less ethanol than controls. The opposite effect was observed in adolescent female observers. The present results are consistent and extend previous work in support of the idea that exposure to the demonstrator-observer paradigm alters voluntary ethanol intake in a sex- and familiarity-dependent manner. Partner familiarity can induce elevated or reduced ethanol consumption in males. However, females appear to be more sensitive to the elevating effects of social interaction on voluntary ethanol consumption, regardless of familiarity of the partner.
酒精很容易促进社交互动,这种作用在青少年饮酒行为中起着重要作用。利用示范者-观察者范式评估了社交互动改变青少年动物对酒精反应行为的能力。示范者接触乙醇,在二元组进行社交互动后,测试观察者对乙醇反应的行为变化。本实验在先前工作的基础上进行扩展,以研究不同类型的社交互动对青少年雄性和雌性大鼠随后自愿摄入乙醇的影响。具体而言,在青少年观察者与无酒精或醉酒的同性熟悉笼伴或年龄匹配的陌生同种动物进行社交互动后,评估其自愿乙醇摄入量。给示范者胃内灌入水或1.5 g/kg乙醇,并在1小时的社会隔离期后让其与观察者进行30分钟的社交互动。随后,让观察者使用双瓶选择范式在夜间13小时内自愿获取乙醇。与醉酒的熟悉笼伴互动的雄性和雌性观察者相对于无酒精的对应者摄入的乙醇显著更多。然而,与醉酒的、年龄匹配的陌生同种动物进行社交互动的青少年雄性观察者摄入的乙醇比对照组显著更少。在青少年雌性观察者中观察到相反的效果。目前的结果与先前的工作一致,并扩展了先前的工作,支持这样一种观点,即接触示范者-观察者范式会以性别和熟悉程度依赖的方式改变自愿乙醇摄入量。伴侣熟悉度可导致雄性乙醇摄入量增加或减少。然而,无论伴侣是否熟悉,雌性似乎对社交互动对自愿乙醇消费的促进作用更敏感。