McMillan, D. E., & Hardwick, W. C. (2000).
Drug discrimination in rats under concurrent variable-interval variable-interval schedules.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
73, 103-120.
Eight rats were trained to discriminate pentobarbital from saline
under a concurrent variable-interval (VI) VI schedule, on which
responses on the pentobarbital-biased lever after pentobarbital
were reinforced under VI 20 s and responses on the saline-biased
lever were reinforced under VI 80 s. After saline, the
reinforcement contingencies programmed on the two levers were
reversed. The rats made 62.3% of their responses on the
pentobarbital-biased lever after pentobarbital and 72.2% on the
saline-biased lever after saline, both of which are lower than
predicted by the matching law. When the schedule was changed to
concurrent VI 50 s VI 50 s for test sessions with saline and the
training dose of pentobarbital, responding on the pentobarbital-
biased lever after the training dose of pentobarbital and on the
saline-biased lever after saline became nearly equal, even during
the first 2 min of the session, suggesting that the presence or
absence of the training drug was exerting minimal control over
responding and making the determination of doseeffect
relations of drugs difficult to interpret. When the pentobarbital
dose response curve was determined under the concurrent VI
50-s VI 50-s schedule, responding was fairly evenly distributed
on both levers for most rats. Therefore, 6 additional rats were
trained to respond under a concurrent VI 60-s VI 240-s schedule.
Under this schedule, the rats made 62.6% of their responses on
the pentobarbital-biased lever after pentobarbital and 73.5% of
their responses on the saline-biased lever after saline, which
also is lower than the percentages predicted by perfect matching.
When the schedule was changed to a concurrent VI 150-s VI 150-s
schedule for 5-min test sessions with additional drugs, the
presence or absence of pentobarbital continued to control
responding in most rats, and it was possible to generate graded
dose response curves for pentobarbital and other drugs
using the data from these 5-min sessions. The doseresponse
curves generated under these conditions were similar to the
doseresponse curves generated using other reinforcement
schedules and other species.
Key words: drug discrimination, concurrent schedules, stimulus
control, schedule control, pentobarbital, rats