DRUG DISCRIMINATION UNDER A CONCURRENT SCHEDULE

Abstract
Three pigeons were trained to discriminate a 5.0 mg/kg dose of pentobarbital from saline under a two‐key concurrent schedule with responding on the key associated with the presession injection, under both stimulus conditions, producing four times as many reinforcers as responding on the other key. This concurrent schedule resulted in approximately 70% responding to the higher reinforcement key under the pentobarbital stimulus and approximately 30% responding to that key under the saline stimulus. During testing, then, the pigeons were able to dose‐dependently emit higher (>70%) or lower (<30%) values than were established under the control conditions. Dose—response curves were determined for pentobarbital (twice), methamphetamine, phencyclidine, chlordiazepoxide, and the combination of pentobarbital and the barbiturate antagonist bemegride. The results obtained with pentobarbital and chlordiazepoxide showed that, as the dose increased, pentobarbital‐appropriate responding also increased. Methamphetamine produced relatively flat dose—response curves, whereas phencyclidine administration produced inconsistent effects on responding. The combination of the training dose of pentobarbital with increasing doses of bemegride produced a decrease in pentobarbital‐appropriate responding. The results also showed that the dose—response curves for pentobarbital and chlordiazepoxide, instead of being all or none, were graded functions of the drug dose.