Abstract

Male rats (F-344) responding for milk on a VI 20 sec schedule of reinforcement were trained to discriminate which of two levers to press on the basis of whether they had been injected with d-amphetamine (0.50, 1.00 or 1.50 mg/kg) or saline 15 min prior to daily training sessions. Dose-response functions determined for each of the three ( n = 6) training-dose groups indicated that ED 50 values were directly correlated with training dose. Two days following chronic amphetamine injections (a total of 78 mg/kg over 4 days) rats were tested for tolerance at a dose which normally produced about 80% drug-lever responding. Rats in all three groups showed tolerance to the cue properties of amphetamine. In the 0.50 and 1.00 mg/kg groups, complete tolerance was shown as evidenced by the fact that the drug lever responding did not differ from that which was appropriate following saline injections.

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