Literature DB >> 6410441

Scopolamine and acquisition of go-no go avoidance: a further analysis of the perseverative antimuscarinic deficit.

V Giardini, L Amorico, L De Acetis, G Bignami.   

Abstract

Rats treated with scopolamine (0.5 mg/kg SC daily) during the acquisition of a discrimination task with symmetrical negative reinforcement (light-go, noise/light-no go) showed a learning impairment, with both active and passive avoidance deficits. In the initial stage of such training, however, fewer passive avoidance errors and more active avoidance errors were made by treated animals if active avoidance pretraining had occurred in the no-drug state. A similar experiment using the same stimulus arrangement with asymmetrical reinforcement (no punishment of intertrial, and no go signal, responses) showed a scopolamine effect consisting mainly of increased responding to extinction signals and during intertrial intervals, with little or no active avoidance deficit. Furthermore, interactions due to changes in treatment conditions in successive stages of training were minimized in the latter task, suggesting that the effects of the shift-no shift factor on distribution of errors in the early stages of active-passive avoidance learning were unlikely to have been due to a genuine drug dissociation. Overall, these results and others obtained previously in the same and related tasks tend to rule out some unidimensional explanations of antimuscarinic effects, e.g., response disinhibition (an exclusively motor deficit) or impairment of stimulus sensitivity (an exclusively sensory deficit). The data rather confirm the notion of a sensorimotor drug bias leading to a shift in response prepotencies depending jointly on stimuli, responses, and response consequences. Prior learning history and behavioural compensation for adverse treatment consequences at the reinforcement level may interact with the sensorimotor bias so as to produce "set perseveration" (perseveration of response tendencies).

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6410441     DOI: 10.1007/BF00427956

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)        ISSN: 0033-3158            Impact factor:   4.530


  24 in total

1.  Prefrontal lesions and avoidance reflex differentiation in dogs.

Authors:  J Dabrowska
Journal:  Acta Neurobiol Exp (Wars)       Date:  1975       Impact factor: 1.579

2.  Effects of scopolamine on shuttle-box avoidance and go-no go discrimination: response-stimulus relationships, pretreatment baselines, and repeated exposure to drug.

Authors:  G Carro-Ciampi; G Bignami
Journal:  Psychopharmacologia       Date:  1968

3.  A behavioral and pharmacological analysis of reinforcement withdrawal.

Authors:  G A Heise; N Laughlin; C Keller
Journal:  Psychopharmacologia       Date:  1970

4.  Effects of scopolamine, atropine, and d-amphetamine on internal and external control of responding on non-reinforced trials.

Authors:  G A Heise; N L Lilie
Journal:  Psychopharmacologia       Date:  1970-08-19

Review 5.  Nonassociative explanations of behavioral changes induced by central cholinergic drugs.

Authors:  G Bignami
Journal:  Acta Neurobiol Exp (Wars)       Date:  1976       Impact factor: 1.579

Review 6.  Organization of endogenous opiate and nonopiate pain control systems.

Authors:  L R Watkins; D J Mayer
Journal:  Science       Date:  1982-06-11       Impact factor: 47.728

7.  Cholinergic drug effects on visual discriminations: a signal detection analysis.

Authors:  K S Milar
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  1981       Impact factor: 4.530

8.  Pharmacological evidence on the specialization of CNS mechanisms responsible for motor act inhibition by aversive events.

Authors:  G Bignami
Journal:  Acta Neurobiol Exp (Wars)       Date:  1979       Impact factor: 1.579

9.  Some hypotheses concerning the functional organization of prefrontal cortex.

Authors:  J Konorski
Journal:  Acta Neurobiol Exp (Wars)       Date:  1972       Impact factor: 1.579

10.  Effects of scopolamine on variable intertrial interval spatial alternation and memory in the rat.

Authors:  G A Heise; R Conner; R A Martin
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  1976-09-17       Impact factor: 4.530

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  1 in total

1.  Central cholinergic involvement in sequential behavior: impairments of performance by atropine in a serial multiple choice task for rats.

Authors:  Stephen B Fountain; James D Rowan; Michael O Wollan
Journal:  Neurobiol Learn Mem       Date:  2013-07-18       Impact factor: 2.877

  1 in total

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