Pinkston, J. W. & Branch, M. N. (2004).
Repeated post- or presession cocaine administration: Roles of dose
and fixed-ratio schedule.
Journal of Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
81, 169-188.
Effects of repeated administration of cocaine to animals behaving under operant
contingencies have depended on when the drug is given. Moderate doses given
presession have generally led to a decrease in the drug's effect, an outcome
usually referred to as tolerance. When these same doses have been given after
sessions, the usual result has been no change or an increase in the drug's
effects, with the latter usually referred to as sensitization. In the present
study, repeated postsession administration of a relatively small dose of cocaine
(3.0 or 5.6 mg/kg) to pigeons responding under a multiple fixed-ratio 5, fixed-
ratio 100 schedule of food presentation generally resulted in tolerance to the
rate-decreasing effects of the drug. When the same dose was given before
sessions, little additional tolerance was observed, although some subjects
showed further tolerance in the small-ratio component. A regimen of repeated
postsession injection of larger (10.0-23.0 mg/kg) doses suppressed key pecking
during the session; responding resumed following discontinuation of postsession
administrations. Effects of postsession administration of cocaine, therefore,
depended on the dose, with smaller doses leading to tolerance and larger ones to
suppression of behavior during the session. Effects of postsession drug
administration of either small or large doses were not related to whether
effects of postsession drug were experienced mainly in the operant test chamber
or in the pigeon's home cage. The results with large postsession doses are
compatible with a view that the drug acted as a Pavlovian unconditional
stimulus, with the session-related stimuli acting as a long-duration Pavlovian
conditional stimulus. Tolerance following postsession administration of the
smaller doses challenges the view that it depended on experiencing the drug's
effects while the arranged reinforcement contingencies were in effect.
Key words: cocaine, tolerance, contingent tolerance, Pavlovian
conditioning, conditional-stimulus duration, key peck, pigeons