McMillan, D. E., Li, M., & Hardwick, W. C. (1997).
Drug discrimination under a concurrent fixed-interval fixed-interval schedule.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
68, 193-217.
Pigeons were trained to discriminate 5.0 mg/kg pentobarbital from
saline under a concurrent fixed-interval (FI) FI schedule of food
presentation on which, after pentobarbital administration,
responses on one key were reinforced with food under an FI 60-s
component and responses on the other key were reinforced under an
FI 240-s component. After saline administration, the schedule
contingencies on the two keys were reversed. After both
pentobarbital and saline, pigeons responded more frequently on
the key on which responses had been programmed under the FI 60
component of the concurrent schedule. The schedule was changed to
concurrent FI 150 FI 150 s for drug-substitution tests. In each
bird, increasing doses of pentobarbital, ethanol, and
chlordiazepoxide produced increases in the proportion of
responses on the key on which responses had been reinforced under
the FI 60 component after pentobarbital administration during
training sessions. The proportion of responses on that key was
slightly lower for ethanol than for chlordiazepoxide and
pentobarbital. At a dose of pentobarbital higher than the
training dose, responding decreased on the key that had been
reinforced under the FI 60 component. The proportion of responses
on that key decreased. Phencyclidine produced less responding on
the key programmed under the FI 60-s component than did
pentobarbital. Methamphetamine produced responding primarily on
the key on which responses had been reinforced under the FI 60-s
component after saline administration.
Key words: drug discrimination, concurrent fixed-interval
schedules, matching law, drugs, key peck, pigeons