Kirshenbaum Ari P, Johnson Matthew W, Schwarz Sarah L, Jackson Eric R
Krikstone Laboratory for the Behavioral Sciences, Department of Psychology, Saint Michael's College, One Winooski Park, Box 193, Colchester, Vermont 05439, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2009 Nov 1;105(1-2):97-108. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2009.06.018. Epub 2009 Jul 28.
Nicotine causes dose-dependent alterations in accuracy on the differential-reinforcement of low-rate responding (DRL) 29.5-s schedule in rats. The current investigation evaluated whether nicotine-associated contextual cues can produce nicotine-like perturbations in DRL-schedule performance in the absence of nicotine. Nicotine and saline administrations occurred just prior to DRL 29.5-s schedule responding for sucrose solution, and two different experimental contexts (differentiated by visual, olfactory, and tactile cues) were utilized. All subjects (N=16) experienced two consecutive sessions of DRL-schedule responding per day. The experimental group (n=8) was exposed to saline immediately prior to the first session and 0.3mg/kg nicotine before the second session, and the context was changed between sessions. This sequence of saline and then nicotine administration, paired with two reliable contexts, persisted for 12 consecutive days and successive nicotine administrations corresponded with increasingly poorer performance on the DRL 29.5-s schedule. No nicotine was administered for days 13-20 during context testing, and the nicotine-associated context produced response disinhibition on the DRL schedule. Two control groups were included in the design; subjects in one control group (n=4) received saline in each context to verify that the contexts themselves were not exerting control over operant responding. To assess how explicit and non-explicit pairings of nicotine and contextual cues influenced DRL behavior, subjects in a second control group (n=4) were given nicotine prior to the second session, but the contexts were not altered between sessions. The results from this experiment suggest that environmental stimuli associated with nicotine exposure can come to elicit nicotine-induced performance decrements on a DRL 29.5-s schedule.
尼古丁会使大鼠在低频率反应(DRL)29.5秒强化程序中的准确性出现剂量依赖性改变。本研究评估了与尼古丁相关的情境线索在无尼古丁情况下是否会对DRL强化程序的表现产生类似尼古丁的干扰。在大鼠为获取蔗糖溶液而进行DRL 29.5秒强化程序反应之前,分别给予尼古丁和生理盐水,并且使用了两种不同的实验情境(通过视觉、嗅觉和触觉线索区分)。所有受试者(N = 16)每天连续进行两节课的DRL强化程序反应。实验组(n = 8)在第一节课之前立即给予生理盐水,在第二节课之前给予0.3mg/kg尼古丁,并且两节课之间更换情境。这种先给予生理盐水然后给予尼古丁的顺序,与两种可靠的情境配对,持续了12天,并且连续给予尼古丁与DRL 29.5秒强化程序中越来越差的表现相对应。在第13 - 20天的情境测试期间不给予尼古丁,与尼古丁相关的情境在DRL强化程序中产生了反应去抑制。设计中包括两个对照组;一个对照组(n = 4)的受试者在每个情境中都接受生理盐水,以验证情境本身不会对操作性反应产生控制。为了评估尼古丁与情境线索的明确和非明确配对如何影响DRL行为,第二个对照组(n = 4)的受试者在第二节课之前给予尼古丁,但两节课之间不改变情境。该实验结果表明,与尼古丁暴露相关的环境刺激会在DRL 29.5秒强化程序中引发尼古丁诱导的表现下降。