Panlilio, L. V., Weiss, S. J., & Schindler, C. W. (2000).
Effects of compounding drug-related stimuli: Escalation of heroin self-administration.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
73, 211-224.
Previous experiments have demonstrated that presenting
independently established discriminative stimuli in compound can
substantially increase operant responding maintained by food
reinforcement or shock avoidance. Recently, this phenomenon was
also shown to occur with cocaine self-administration. The present
study further assessed the generality of these
stimulus-compounding effects by systematically replicating them
with heroin self-administration. Rats' nose-poke responses
produced intravenous heroin (0.025 mg/kg per infusion) on a
variable-ratio schedule when either a tone or a light was
present. In the absence of these stimuli, responding was not
reinforced. Once discriminative control by the tone and light had
been established, the stimuli were presented in compound under
extinction (with heroin discontinued) or maintenance conditions
(with heroin available during test-stimulus presentations). In
extinction, the tonelight compound increased responding
approximately threefold compared to tone or light alone. Under
maintenance conditions, compounding increased heroin intake
approximately twofold. These effects closely matched those
obtained earlier with cocaine. This consistency across
pharmacological classes and across drug and nondrug reinforcers
further confirms that (a) self-administered drugs support
conditioning and learning in a manner similar to that supported
by other reinforcers; and (b) multiple drug-related cues interact
in lawful and predictable ways to affect drug seeking and
consumption.
Key words: self-administration, stimulus compounding, stimulus
control, drug abuse, incentive-motivation, cocaine, heroin, nose
poke, rat