Ethanol and behavioral variability in the radial-arm maze
- 1 January 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Psychopharmacology
- Vol. 79 (1) , 21-24
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00433010
Abstract
Ethanol (0.75, 1.5, 2.0 g/kg ethyl alcohol) consistently and profoundly narrowed three independent dimensions of behavioral variability (BV) exhibited by rats in an eight-arm radial maze. Thie was true for all doses except the lowest. Rats were run with a replacement procedure wherein rewards (two food pellets) were replaced after they were taken. With no constraints against where, how, or by what route rewards could be taken, the three indices of spontaneous BV recorded were the number of different arms chosen, the sequence of visitation, and instances of deviations from goal-directed activity. The behavior of saline and low-dose groups was widely variable in form and place; and the sequence of behavior was relatively unpredictable from trial to trial and from session to session. Medium and high doses of ethanol exerted a marked organizing influence on behavior. Superfluous topographies were eliminated, sequences became highly, and in many cases perfectly predictable, and spatial BV declined. The considerable promotion of stereotypy by ethanol helps to explain many effects of the drug, e.g., how the drug can in some instances impair, and in others facilitate performance. We propose that the scores from tasks whose mastery entails repetition, few topographies, and rigid structure will be improved by ethanol, but that those requiring change and the sampling of new strategies with be impaired.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Necessity of the hippocampus for alcohol's indirect but not direct behavioral actionBehavioral and Neural Biology, 1981
- Relative stereotypy of water-ingestive behavior induced by chronic alcohol injections in the ratBulletin of the Psychonomic Society, 1979
- Remembrance of places passed: Spatial memory in rats.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes, 1976
- Effect of d-amphetamine, ethanol and genever on learning in the ratPharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1976
- Factors governing the vulnerability of DRL operant performance to the effects of ethanolPsychopharmacology, 1973
- The effects of caffeine, alcohol, and previous exposure to the test situation on spontaneous alternationPsychopharmacology, 1970
- Effects of alcohol and amobarbital on performance inhibited by experimental extinction.Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 1962
- Effects of drugs on approach-avoidance conflict tested repeatedly by means of a "telescope alley."Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 1962
- Effects of alcohol on timing behavior.Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 1962
- Technique for Assessing the Effects of Drugs on Timing BehaviorScience, 1955