Role of conditioned reinforcers in the initiation, maintenance and extinction of drug-seeking behavior
- 1 October 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in The Pavlovian Journal of Biological Science
- Vol. 11 (4) , 222-236
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf03000316
Abstract
The development of a secondary reinforcer as a result of associating a neutral stimulus (buzzer) with intravenous (IV) doses of morphine was studied in rats. Secondary reinforcement developed in the absence of physical dependence and followed the association of the stimulus with either response-contingent or non-contingent injections of morphine. Strength of the conditioned reinforcer, measured in terms of responding on a lever for the stimulus plus infusion of saline solution, was proportional to the unit dosage of morphine employed in pairings of buzzer and drug. When extinction of the lever-press response for IV morphine was conducted (by substituting saline for morphine solution) in the absence of the conditioned reinforcing stimulus, it was seen later that the stimulus could still elicit lever responses, until it too had been present for a sufficient interval of non-reinforced responding. Similarly, extinction of the response for morphine by blocking its action with naloxone in the absence of the stimulus did not eliminate the conditioned reinforcement. Another study showed that a passive, subcutaneous (SC) dose of morphine served to maintain lever-pressing on a contingency of buzzer plus sahne infusion. Furthermore, the stimuli resulting from the presence of morphine (after a SC injection) were able to reinstate the lever-responding with only the buzzer-saline contingency when such responses had previously been extinguished. Moreover, it was shown thatd-amphetamine could restore responding under the same conditions, and that morphine could also do so for rats in which the primary reinforcer had beend-amphetamine. It is suggested that animal data such as these show that procedures designed for the elimination of human drug-taking behavior must take into account secondary reinforcers as well as the primary reinforcer(s).Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Morphine enhancement of shuttle avoidance prevented by ?-methyltyrosinePsychopharmacology, 1975
- Behavioral control by stimuli associated with acquisition of morphine self-administrationBehavioral Biology, 1973
- Differential effects of morphine on active avoidance as a function of pre-drug performancePharmacological Research Communications, 1973
- Blocking of morphine based reinforcement by alpha-methyltyrosineLife Sciences, 1973
- Blocking effect of α-methyltyrosine on amphetamine based reinforcementJournal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, 1973
- Time‐dose relationships for locomotor activity effects of morphine after acute or repeated treatmentBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1972
- Morphine dependence in rats: Secondary reinforcement from environmental stimuliPsychopharmacology, 1972
- Some implications of conditioning theory for problems of drug abuseBehavioral Science, 1971
- Self Administration of and Behavioral Dependence on DrugsAnnual Review of Pharmacology, 1969
- The Conditioned Reinforcing Effects of Stimuli Associated with Morphine ReinforcementInternational Journal of the Addictions, 1968