In a simple discrimination test using a two-compartment shuttle box with mice, we examined the action properties of dependence-liable drugs. In mice trained to discriminate morphine from saline, neither methamphetamine (MAP) nor cocaine (COCA) was generalized to the discriminative stimulus effects of morphine. 2. Similarly, in mice trained to discriminate MAP from saline, COCA, which is known to have neuronal mechanisms in common with MAP, was generalized to the stimulus effects of MAP, but morphine was not. 3. Dihydroetorphine (DHE), which has receptor mechanisms in common with morphine, was generalized to the discriminative stimulus effects of morphine, whereas it was not generalized to the effects of MAP. Thus, the present discrimination test might be useful for the first screening of compounds with unknown neuronal mechanisms, particularly for classification into groups having separate neuropharmacological mechanisms in common.