Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9406671 | Behavioural Brain Research | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Using a locomotor conditioning preparation, we examined whether manipulating time between exposure to distinct environmental cues and nicotine administration affected conditioned responding. Rats that received nicotine (0.42Â mg/kg base) immediately before placement in an environment for 30Â min on eight separate occasions displayed hyperactivity relative to controls in a subsequent injection/drug-free test. This conditioned hyperactivity was weaker if nicotine was administered 15Â min before environment exposure. Conditioning was not evidenced when nicotine was administered 15Â min after placement or upon removal from the environment. In a follow-up experiment, rats received 45Â min in the environment; nicotine was administered 15Â min after placement. This group showed conditioning that was localized to the last two-thirds of a 45Â min test indicating that a 15Â min delay did not prevent conditioning given 30Â min of environment/nicotine overlap. This apparent timing of conditioned responding was not due to increasing environment exposure to 45Â min. Further, a state-dependent environmental familiarization account of locomotor hyperactivity during testing was eliminated by the finding that rats displayed temporally specific increases in activity on the test day despite the fact that the context was previously experienced without drug for 15Â min on eight consecutive days.
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Authors
Rick A. Bevins, Sarah Eurek, Joyce Besheer,