Galuska, C. M. & Woods, J. H. (2005).
Acquisition of cocaine self-administration with unsignaled delayed reinforcement
in rhesus monkeys.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 84,
269-280.
Six experimentally naive rhesus monkeys produced 0.01 mg/kg/infusion cocaine by
lever pressing under a tandem fixed-ratio 1 differential-reinforcement-of-other-
behavior schedule. One lever press initiated an unsignaled 15- or 30-s delay
culminating in cocaine delivery. Each press made during the delay reset the
delay interval. With two exceptions, responding was acquired and maintained at
higher rates than responding on a second (inoperative) lever. For the
exceptions, a cancellation contingency was arranged in which each formerly
inoperative-lever response reset the tandem schedule. This manipulation reduced
presses on the inoperative lever. Subsequently, the consequences of responding
on the two levers were reversed, and the monkeys again responded at higher rates
on the operative lever. As a comparison, 3 additional experimentally naive
monkeys received response-independent cocaine deliveries. Although lever
pressing was observed, it extinguished and was subsequently reestablished under
the tandem schedule. The results suggest that although response-reinforcer
contiguity is not required for cocaine to acquire reinforcing functions, a
response-reinforcer relation appears necessary.
Key words: cocaine self-administration, delayed reinforcement, acquisition,
lever press, rhesus monkey