Literature DB >> 25363637

Cocaine can generate a stronger conditioned reinforcer than food despite being a weaker primary reinforcer.

Brendan J Tunstall1, David N Kearns1.   

Abstract

The present study aimed to test the hypothesis that cues associated with drug-taking behavior become extra strong motivators of behavior compared with cues paired with non-drug reinforcers. In experiment 1, rats were trained to lever press for intravenous cocaine infusions and grain pellets. Each reinforcer was paired with a distinct audiovisual cue. When allowed to choose between these alternatives, rats chose grain on ~70-80 percent of trials. However, after extinguishing lever pressing, reintroduction of press-contingent cues during a test for cue-induced reinstatement generated more cocaine seeking than grain seeking (also observed on 3- and 8-week follow-up tests). To examine whether the same pattern of results would occur with two non-drug reinforcers, experiment 2 replicated experiment 1 using grain and sucrose as reinforcement alternatives. Rats chose sucrose over grain on ~70-80 percent of choice trials and also responded more for the sucrose cue than for the grain cue on the reinstatement test. The disconnect between primary and conditioned reinforcements in experiment 1 but not in experiment 2 suggests that drug cues may become exceptionally strong motivators of drug seeking. These results are consistent with cue-focused theories of addiction and may offer insight into the persistent cue-driven drug-seeking behavior observed in addiction.
© 2014 Society for the Study of Addiction.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Choice; cocaine; cue-induced reinstatement; food; rat; self-administration

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25363637      PMCID: PMC4417659          DOI: 10.1111/adb.12195

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Addict Biol        ISSN: 1355-6215            Impact factor:   4.280


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