Effects of chlordiazepoxide, buspirone and cocaine on behavior suppressed by timeout presentation.

1997 
: Male Wistar rats were exposed to a two-component multiple schedule: a random-interval 30 s schedule of pellet presentation and a conjoint random-interval 30 s schedule of pellet presentation, random-interval 2 s schedule of timeout 10 s presentation. Once responding had stabilized subjects were injected intraperitoneally with vehicle, chlordiazepoxide (1-30 mg/kg), buspirone (0.1-4.2 mg/kg) or cocaine (1-30 mg/kg), 15 min before the start of the experimental session. Before drug administration, punished response rates were less than 30% of unpunished response rates for four of the six subjects, and 60% and 75% for the other two. Low doses of chlordiazepoxide (1 and 3 mg/kg) increased punished responding (range 25-300%), and slightly increased unpunished response rates (by 25% in all but one subject, whose rates increased by 75%). The higher doses of chlordiazepoxide (10-30 mg/kg) dose-dependently decreased response rates in both components. The lower doses of buspirone (0.1 and 0.3 mg/kg) either did not affect, or decreased response rates in both components of the schedule; the higher doses produced dose-dependent decreases. Low doses of cocaine (1, 3 and 5.6 mg/kg) did not affect response rates in either component of the multiple schedule, whereas higher doses produced a dose-dependent decrease in response rates, except for one subject whose punished response rates increased substantially. The behavioral effects of chlordiazepoxide and buspirone observed in the present experiment were similar to those observed in experiments in which response rates were suppressed by shock presentation.
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