Stewart, R. B., Wang, N., Bass, A. A., & Meisch, R. A. (2002).
Relative reinforcing effects of different oral ethanol doses in rhesus monkeys.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
77, 49-64.
The relative reinforcing effects of different doses of orally
delivered ethanol were evaluated. Mouth-contact responding by
rhesus monkeys was measured under concurrent fixed-ratio fixed-
ratio schedules of liquid delivery (0.67 ml/delivery) from each
of two spouts during daily 3-hr sessions. Experiment 1 examined
persistence of responding with ethanol (2%, 8%, and 32% wt/vol)
and water available. When fixed-ratio values from 8 to 128 were
tested, the number of ethanol deliveries obtained per session
decreased as the response requirement increased. The decrease in
deliveries was less at higher than at lower ethanol
concentrations, however. Experiment 2 examined choice between two
ethanol concentrations under concurrent fixed-ratio 16 schedules
(4% vs. 8%, 4% vs. 16%, 8% vs. 16%, 2% vs. 8%, 2% vs. 32%, 8% vs.
32%). Higher concentrations (16%, 32%) generally maintained more
responding than concurrently available concentrations of 8% or
less. An exception was the observation of a preference for 8%
over 32% ethanol. When the fixed-ratio value was increased,
however, the relative preference for these two doses was reversed
so that 32% ethanol maintained more responding than 8% ethanol.
Thus, the direction of the preference depended on the size of the
response requirement. These results indicate that the reinforcing
effects of ethanol increase with dose.
Key words: drug self-administration, oral route, alcohol,
reinforcer magnitude, concurrent fixed-ratio schedules,
mouth-contact responses, rhesus monkeys