The lever-pressing behaviour of three rats was maintained by a schedule in which food reinforcement was obtained by any response which was emitted at least 15 s after the previous response (DRL 15 s). When performance on this schedule had stabilised, the animals were presented intermittently with l-
Comparison between the effects of propranolol and chlordiazepoxide on timing behaviour in the rat
β Scribed by Peter Salmon; Jeffrey A. Gray
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 675 KB
- Volume
- 87
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0033-3158
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Ten rats were trained to lever press for food reward on a schedule of differential reinforcement of low rates of response with a 20-s criterion (DRL 20). Ten more were trained on a new schedule of punishment, designed to be comparable to DRL 20 -differential punishment of high rates of response (DPH 20). Under this schedule, responses with a latency of 20 s or more earned food rewards, while those of less than 20 s were followed by food reward and brief electric footshock. After 42 sessions, rats on each schedule showed temporal discrimination in the distribution of inter-response times. The effects on these baselines of the anxiolytic chlordiazepoxide (CDP; 1 mg/kg IP) and the beta-blocker propranolol (2, 5 and 10 mg/kg IP) were investigated. Both drugs reduced numbers of responses reaching criterion (criterion responses) in DPH, CDP increasing total responses. CDP acted similarly under DRL, but propranolol only affected performance at the highest dose, which reduced criterion responses, probably because of changes in total responding. Each drug increased response bursts. It is concluded that propranolol can exert a disinhibitory action in these schedules, although with some differences from that of the benzodiazepine CDP.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Propranolol, a nonspecific Ξ²βblocker, has many physiologic effects. Its effects on bone in vivo are unknown, although Ξ² receptor sites have been found on osteoblasts. In this study, the hypothesis tested was that low doses of propranolol could alter bone properties and enhance orthotopi
Pyrroxan (20 mg/kg, i.p.) , a new potential antianxiety agent, increased brain norepinephrine (NE) turnover in rats, reflecting a possible central e-adrenergic receptor blocking activity, in contrast, chlordiazepoxide (20 mg/kg, i.p.), a widely used antianxiety agent, did not alter the NE turnover.
l~ats avoided a distinctive environment in which they had previously received inescapable electric shocks; the amounts of passive avoidance were taken as indices of the levels of conditioned fear on repeated unpunished tests. Chlordiazepoxide, 7.5 and 15.0 mg/kg tended to reduce fear, but did not ac