Abstract

Lever-pressing behavior was generated and maintained in 3 rhesus monkeys by intravenous infusions of morphine or cocaine under a second-order schedule of reinforcement. Under this schedule, every tenth lever-press response (FR 10) during a fixed interval of time produced a 2 sec stimulus light. The first FR 10 completed after a 60 min interval had elapsed produced the stimulus light and an intravenous infusion of morphine or cocaine. The stimulus light remained on for the duration of the drug infusion (50–60 sec). Sessions of morphine or cocaine presentation, each with distinct stimulus light conditions, alternated on a daily basis. Under this schedule, single doses of morphine from 0.125 to 1.0 mg/kg maintained high overall response rates (maximum of 40 Rs/min) in the pattern characteristic of fixed interval (FI) schedules of reinforcement. There was no functional relationship between the response-rates and the doses of morphine tested. The simultaneous infusion of naloxone (0.125 mg/kg) with morphine (0.25 mg/kg) markedly decreased response rates. However, the infusion of the same dose of naloxone five min after the presentation of morphine failed to suppress self-administration behavior. Naloxone had no effects on cocaine-reinforced responding.

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