Snodgrass, S. H., Hardin, J. L., & McMillan, D. E. (1997).
Behavior of rats under fixed consecutive number schedules: Effects of drugs of abuse.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
68, 117-132.
Four rats responded under a simple fixed consecutive number
schedule in which eight or more consecutive responses on the run
lever, followed by a single response on the reinforcement lever,
produced the food reinforcer. Under this simple schedule,
doseresponse curves were determined for diazepam, morphine,
pentobarbital, and phencyclidine. The rats were then trained to
respond under a multiple fixed consecutive number schedule in
which a discriminative stimulus signaled when the response
requirement on the run lever had been completed in one of the two
fixed consecutive number component schedules. Under control
conditions, the percentage of reinforced runs under the
multiple-schedule component with the discriminative stimulus
added was much higher than the percentage of reinforced runs
under the multiple-schedule component without the discriminative
stimulus. All of the drugs decreased the percentage of reinforced
runs under each of the fixed consecutive number schedules by
increasing the conditional probability of short run lengths. This
effect was most consistently produced by morphine. The drugs
produced few differences in responding between the multiple fixed
consecutive number components. Responding under the simple fixed
consecutive number schedule, however, was affected at lower doses
of the drugs than was responding under the same fixed consecutive
number schedule when it was a component of the multiple schedule.
This result may be due to the difference in schedule context or,
perhaps, to the order of the experiments.
Key words: fixed consecutive number schedule, stimulus control,
drug, diazepam, morphine, pentobarbital, phencyclidine, multiple
schedule, lever press, rats